Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1997-09-12

26
Visit us on the Web at . - 12, 11)!I/ OWol City's Morning Nt.·WSpllfll'1i DI , ........ , ................ ,., ............ . Slll'f this The Hllon Woman March: http://members. , aol.comlllbitxl indeX/hlml Ul tudent say they are eagerlyanticipatmg III Phllad Iphia's Million Woman M rch next month, "------- lfiJnderful, different, mean- ingful tllings will OCCUJ', \ changed black men's lives and this, we believe, is the beginning for the uplift- •••••••••••• I, .•••••..••••.• .... ••••••••.••.•••••••••••••• Ing of ourselves.' Philadelphia, "The City of Brotherly Love," will be the home of this gathering. PLATFORM Some of the platform Issues that will be addressed at the MIllion Woman March : t tI ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , ••• III ... ND Ph lie Chlonesil Founder and co-chairperson of the March -------" "Philadelphia is synonymous with the cradle of liberty. It's where our nation was bom, the Constitution, the Declara- tion of Independence," Chionesu said. "We (African-American women) are pre- pared to make a declaration ofindepen- The further development of African-American women, who are or wish to become professional enlrepreneurs and/or politicians . change in the Mrican-American com- munityand increased representation at voting poles, mentor programs and oth- er political and social developments. The development of African-American independent schools with a 21 st century focus from prekindergarten through 12th grade. This Oct. 25, a gr888-roots and global group of Mrican-American women are taking the next step toward recreating that event - the Million Woman March. dence of our own," she said. Modei Akyea, manager of the UI's Afro-American Cultural Center, said due to resources, participation in the The development of health facilities that offer preventive and thera- peutic treatment. actual event will be difficult. Programming that will bring about an environment that fosters the necessary Interaction with youth . "Wonderfu l, different, meaningful things will occur," said Phile Chionesu, founder and co-chairperson of the March. "(The Million Man March) However , the center will have a local gathering that celebrates the Million Woman March and remembers the Formation of rites of passage centers which provide continual pro- gramming . The development of that ensure the gentrification of neighborhoods as it relates to public and private housing. See MARCH, Page 6A FOOTBALL WEEKTm:> ..................................... .......... •••...•••••.••••••••• Jonathan MeesterfThe Daily Iowan nnw Colden Girl Julie Canterbury practic" with the Hawkeye Marching Band Thursday afternoon. Golden Girl glad to twirl for Hawks Hawk Fans flood Melrose Market on game days twirling abilities to Dr. Morgan Jones, acting assietant director of bands. "I was one of two finalists," she said. "We both had to audition and be inter- viewed in front of judges and 1 ended up g tting it. My family and friends were outalde the room, they came rush- ing in crying, it was unbelievable.' UI 8enior and drum major Chad mith was on the committee that lected the new Golden Girl. "I really liked her stYle," he said. "She bad the right attitude, you could tell ahe really wanted to be the Golden Girl.· . Hell Week in Augu t was the slart of Canterbury', term, and she will r main the Golden Girl until she Ith r rr du te or r sign . "I'm on an NCAA tulUon scholarship that laat8 for four years," ahe said. "That'a how long 1 plan on taying." Sh started taking rorlJlal lessons wh n ahe was three yeartl old, follow- il\i in th footstepll of her sister. "My older sister took baton les80ns, and I wanted to be jU,st like her,· she GOlDEN, Page 6A Melrose Market, located near Kinnick Stadium, does big business on football Saturdays. Students nail down beauty hasics . "I'm going out of town today and 1 wanted to get my nails done,· he sald. City High School unlor Mandy , JunJ r 8 Ity Buhy carrlea more Morano said acrylics at her than. 0 on Lh tlplorh rflng rl , high school. he usually spends around Erin Jordan o Ily Iowan "' u ually .pend about $60 a month $60 a month on her naile, ahe said. on nail.: ld Bub I who II to La "LOts of my frienda aU have acrylic I in th ld pltol Man for her, naila: :' h laid. nlanlcu . "(With ryli) , your nail. Other UI students said they are per- m a 10 lron r and I want my •. pleted ' why a penon would spend lhe h nd look nl ,. money and effort to Pllt their nails in Fa hlonably colored acrylic. af perfect shape. p min nt on th h nde of both mala 01 ,eruor Jerry Steele said he really and f, mal U1 .tudenll, but Procurllll doeln t J\oUce porfectly manicured fin - th pen nail I turning Into an II" nall, on women around campua. ion for 10m .tud ·nil. . "Mor. pow r to them if they want to Un in a bowl of warm t them done," he Baid. "But it's not n her cut I bed., Bully th fint thing we're lookina at." ft bU in, c"lIe nail. UI Mlphomore Stephanie Meder 8aid he woUldn't t her nails done , By Jeff Bloomquist The Daily Iowan Five hundred pounds of tender- loins, 1,000 bratwurst, 750 cold cut sandwiches, and 75-100 kegs worth of beer - these figures don't represent the yearly consumption of UI students, but normal sales on a football Saturday at Iowa City's Melrose Market. The Melrose Market, 1006 Mel- See MARkET, Page 6A Students to argue in Court . • Six UI students are scheduled to present arguments concerning sex offenders before the Iowa Supreme Court this Saturday. By Kelli Otting The Daily Iowan UI student Ashish Mishra is "extremely nervous' about his Satur- day appearance before the Iowa Supreme Court. Mishra is not involved in any court battle or part of a prolonged legal case - he is traveling to Des Moines to argue a mock case before the highest court in Iowa . Misbra and his classmates said they have been anticipating the event since they entered the UI law school. "I remember the day when I "----- was a It is a little student watching 'ti 'd the third-year ttl ,nt alimg . students try their to "epl'eSent own appointed the UI in,tront cases/ he said. The justices of the state will hear argu- justices and ments on a mock the rest of my case based , on a fictitious classmates, statute requiring but I know we convicted sex will dofine. to be Christine Conover regIstered when they are released Ullaw student from prison. " . Under the statute, law enforcement officers and the public must be notified when a person convicted of aggravated sexual offenses moves into their community. The case involv/!s an appeal to the court on whether the rllquire- ments of registering and publicly dis- closing a convicted person's record and home address should be considered an additional ex post facto punishment, and therefore unconstitutional. The team is \I1ade up of six students. Two students will argue the state's position, while two fight for their defendant's rjght to privacy. The remaining students are responsible for the briefs and making sure that all procedures are followed .. Mishra said the Supreme Court jus- tices are constantly asking questions 'without letting up because they know See TRW., Page 6A "1 don't hay any reaaon to get them don ," Bite eaid , -I don't have the time, ThomplOll/The Daily Iowan Jackie Powers of Wayland, Iowa has her fingernails by La Naill See NAILS, p. 6A manager James Tran Thurday afternoon In Old Capital Mall. I

Transcript of Daily Iowan (Iowa City, Iowa), 1997-09-12

Visit us on the Web at http:/~,uioWa.edul-dlyiowan/

. -

frid:,)'; 'S~l'tclIIllI'r 12, 11)!I/ OWol City's Morning Nt.·WSpllfll'1i

DI , ........ , ................ ,., ............ .

Slll'f this

The Hllon Woman March: http://members. , aol.comlllbitxl

indeX/hlml

• Ul tudent say they are lkt;~ eagerlyanticipatmg III Phllad Iphia's Million Woman

M rch next month,

"------­lfiJnderful, different, mean­ingful tllings will OCCUJ',

\

changed black men's lives and this, we believe, is the beginning for the uplift- .~~ •••••••••••• I, .•••••..••••.•....••••••••.••.•••••••••••••• Ing of ourselves.'

Philadelphia, "The City of Brotherly Love," will be the home of this gathering.

PLATFORM Some of the platform Issues that will be addressed at the MIllion Woman March:

t tI ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , ••• III ...

ND

Ph lie Chlonesil Founder and co-chairperson of the March

-------" "Philadelphia is synonymous with the

cradle of liberty. It's where our nation was bom, the Constitution, the Declara­tion of Independence," Chionesu said. "We (African-American women) are pre­pared to make a declaration ofindepen­

• The further development of African-American women, who are or wish to become professional enlrepreneurs and/or politicians.

change in the Mrican-American com­munityand increased representation at voting poles, mentor programs and oth­er political and social developments.

• The development of African-American independent schools with a 21 st century focus from prekindergarten through 12th grade.

This Oct. 25, a gr888-roots and global group of Mrican-American women are taking the next step toward recreating that event - the Million Woman March.

dence of our own," she said. Modei Akyea, manager of the UI's

Afro-American Cultural Center, said due to resources, participation in the

• The development of health facilities that offer preventive and thera­peutic treatment.

actual event will be difficult.

• Programming that will bring about an environment that fosters the necessary Interaction with youth.

"Wonderfu l, different, meaningful things will occur," said Phile Chionesu, founder and co-chairperson of the March . "(The Million Man March)

However, the center will have a local gathering that celebrates the Million Woman March and remembers the

• Formation of rites of passage centers which provide continual pro­gramming.

• The development of mech~nisms that ensure the gentrification of neighborhoods as it relates to public and private housing.

See MARCH, Page 6A

FOOTBALL WEEKTm:> .....................................•..........•••...•••••.•••••••••

Jonathan MeesterfThe Daily Iowan

low~' nnw Colden Girl Julie Canterbury practic" with the Hawkeye Marching Band Thursday afternoon.

Golden Girl glad to twirl for Hawks

Hawk Fans flood Melrose Market on game days

twirling abilities to Dr. Morgan Jones, acting assietant director of bands.

"I was one of two finalists," she said. "We both had to audition and be inter­viewed in front of judges and 1 ended up g tting it. My family and friends were outalde the room, they came rush­ing in crying, it was unbelievable.'

UI 8enior and drum major Chad mith was on the committee that lected the new Golden Girl. "I really liked her stYle," he said. "She

bad the right attitude, you could tell ahe really wanted to be the Golden Girl.· .

Hell Week in Augu t was the slart of Canterbury', term, and she will r main the Golden Girl until she Ith r rr du te or r sign . "I'm on an NCAA tulUon scholarship

that laat8 for four years," ahe said. "That'a how long 1 plan on taying."

Sh started taking rorlJlal lessons wh n ahe was three yeartl old, follow­il\i in th footstepll of her sister.

"My older sister took baton les80ns, and I wanted to be jU,st like her,· she

~ GOlDEN, Page 6A

• Melrose Market, located near Kinnick Stadium, does big business on football Saturdays.

Students nail down beauty hasics . "I'm going out of town today and 1

wanted to get my nails done,· he sald. City High School unlor Mandy

, JunJ r 8 Ity Buhy carrlea more Morano said acrylics artI~pular at her than. 0 on Lh tlplorh rflng rl, high school. he usually spends around

Erin Jordan o Ily Iowan

"' u ually .pend about $60 a month $60 a month on her naile, ahe said. on nail.: ld Bub I who II to La "LOts of my frienda aU have acrylic

I in th ld pltol Man for her , naila::'h laid. nlanlcu . "(With ryli), your nail. Other UI students said they are per-

m a 10 lron r and I want my •. pleted 'why a penon would spend lhe h nd look nl ,. money and effort to Pllt their nails in

Fa hlonably colored acrylic. af perfect shape. p min nt on th h nde of both mala 01 ,eruor Jerry Steele said he really and f, mal U1 .tudenll, but Procurllll doeln t J\oUce porfectly manicured fin-th pen nail I turning Into an II" nall, on women around campua.

ion for 10m .tud · nil. . "Mor. pow r to them if they want to Un in a bowl of warm t them done," he Baid. "But it's not

n her cut I bed., Bully th fint thing we're lookina at." ft bU in, c"lIe nail. UI Mlphomore Stephanie Meder 8aid

he woUldn't t her nails done,

By Jeff Bloomquist The Daily Iowan

Five hundred pounds of tender­loins, 1,000 bratwurst, 750 cold cut sandwiches, and 75-100 kegs worth of beer - these figures don't represent the yearly consumption of UI students, but normal sales on a football Saturday at Iowa City's Melrose Market.

The Melrose Market, 1006 Mel-

See MARkET, Page 6A

Students to argue in Court

. • Six UI students are scheduled to present arguments concerning sex offenders before the Iowa Supreme Court this Saturday.

By Kelli Otting The Daily Iowan

UI student Ashish Mishra is "extremely nervous' about his Satur­day appearance before the Iowa Supreme Court.

Mishra is not involved in any court battle or part of a prolonged legal case - he is traveling to Des Moines to argue a mock case before the highest court in Iowa.

Misbra and his classmates said they have been anticipating the event since they entered the UI law school.

"I remember the day when I "----­was a first-y~ar It is a little student watching 'ti 'd ~ the third-year ttl ,nt alimg. students try their to "epl'eSent own appointed the UI in,tront cases/ he said.

The justices of the state will hear argu- justices and ments on a mock the rest of my case based ,on a fictitious ~owa classmates, statute requiring but I know we convicted sex will dofine. off~nders to be Christine Conover regIstered when they are released Ullaw student from prison. " . Under the

statute, law enforcement officers and the public must be notified when a person convicted of aggravated sexual offenses moves into their community.

The case involv/!s an appeal to the hi~h court on whether the rllquire­ments of registering and publicly dis­closing a convicted person's record and home address should be considered an additional ex post facto punishment, and therefore unconstitutional.

The team is \I1ade up of six students. Two students will argue the state's position, while two fight for their defendant's rjght to privacy. The remaining students are responsible for the briefs and making sure that all procedures are followed ..

Mishra said the Supreme Court jus­tices are constantly asking questions 'without letting up because they know

See TRW., Page 6A

"1 don't hay any reaaon to get them don ," Bite eaid, -I don't have the time,

~ ThomplOll/The Daily Iowan

Jackie Powers of Wayland, Iowa has her fingernails manlcure~ by La Naill See NAILS, p. 6A manager James Tran Thurday afternoon In Old Capital Mall. I

~ I I I

II

21'.- The Daily Iowan - lowa.City,lowa· Friday, September 12, 1997

Coming:

odds and •.................

-ENDS . Man charged with drunken lIriving-on

" ~ bike PITISBURGH

(All) - Francis - Glancy can avoid · trial on a drunken

driving charge if he attends alcohol

• 18habllitalion and · ~as his driver's

license suspend· • ed. Proillem is, he

doesn't drive or mve a license.

• Glancy was ' charged after he fell from his 10-

• speed bicycle, lnjlJring his face.

He admitted ~ripking several b~ers on May 31 before getting on hiS bike and head· Ing for his house a few blocks away. Police said his

., TODAY: Feature, ~ Mo_ Wild Card, ~ 1'IIIdIy: UI Department, ~ W.d • ....,: Pop Quiz???

J'1=riday Featur~' Jj Two-Pound Burrito ,a __________________ ~--

The Panchero's challenge

• Six contestants are gear­ing up to eat a mammoth amount of Panchero's two­pound burritos.

By Steven Cook The Daily Iowan

UI junior Andy Dordek is getting revved up to scarf down an obscene amount of two-pound burritos in an hour and a half.

: - blood alcohol level ;. was 0.328, more

Dordek, who entered irl Panchero's first two-pound burrito eating contest, said he's mentally preparing for the event by resting up and partaking in another cam· pus activity.

"I think I'm going to the bars beforehand to get my stomach ready," he said.

.; than three times :: the legal limit.

Caulfield said , Glancy now must

obtain a driver's

Panchero's Mexican Grill will hold the contest today at 4:30 p.m. to celebrate five years at its down· town location. '. license - even

though he does not need one - so that il can be suspend­ed for 30 days.

Six contestants will be provided with as many two-pound burritos as they can eat, and the winner will get one two· pound burrito a week for 16 weeks.

"----------------------------If it was eating two pounds of ice Cl'eam, J think fd be competitive. But not two-pound bm')'itQS.

~lIy [Izel Th Da,ly Iowan

Panchero' employee Joel Flore Varga shows the 2 lb. .. The halftime

.. show: Porn LOS ANGELES

Contestants signed up for the cOl}test through a radio promotion. Dordek said his friends signed him up.

"I think I'm prepared to take more than my share," he said.

Ann Rhodes burrito. Panchero' will

Vice President for University Relations on a possible burrito eating conlest be holding a 2 I .. (AP) - Foolball ____________________ " Ib, bu"ito-eat-II .. widows, lake note:

.. It appears no one Despite his preparations,

Dordek, who is only 5' 6" and 155 Ibs., said he could probably only eat two at the most.

DeSchepper said he's heard of people eating four in one sitting, but said he thinks that's a myth.

"If' . d f ' ing contest fri-It was eating two poun s a Ice d ft cream, I think I'd be competitive,· i aya ernoon • she said. "But not two-pound burri. i The conte t tos." i winner will

. ; minded when the second half of a

,. game between :: California State·

"I'm there to have fun and enjoy the food," he said.

"I'd like to beat the three 'and a half from the Columbia store," DeSchepper said about the restau­rant's goal, "but I wouldn't want to,lI

The event will last from 4:30 p.m. i receive a " Northridge and the •. Universily of

This will be the first contest of its kind at the Iowa City location, but restaurant manager Dean DeSchepper said it's been held at other restaurants.

to 7:30 p.m. this afternoon at the i seme ter of Panchero's 32 S. Clinton St. tore. i free burritos.

.' Hawaii was pre­:: empted Ily a porn Ann Rhodes, vice president for

University Relations, said she had­n't heard of any two-pound burrito eating contests in the past. She also said she probably wouldn't do very well if she were in such a contest.

This will be the first two-pound 1 burrito eating conte t held at the i UT, DeSchepper said. They plan to j make it an annual event. i

" broadcast " :: The game was "We just had a competition at our

Columbia, Mo. store, and someone there ate three and a half two­pound burritos," he said.

"We wanted to do something fun 1 to welcome students back and to : thank them,' he said. :

.' being broadcast on " • Fox Sports West 2, " but. just as the sec­

ond half was about to begin at mid­night Saturday, the cable channel auto· matically switched to the Adam & Eve adult channel.

Parents: Die you stupid little virtual keychain • Parents pressed into service as virtual pet-sitters.

hottest toy of the moment: virtual pets. With schools banning them across the

country, the egg-sized computer critters - which beep at all hours to be fed , cleaned, and amused - are being mis­taken for pagers in executive pockets. They're keeping bleary·eyed parents awake at night. And they're sparking passions not usually associated with chil­dren's toys.

around $15 each_ A half-dozen compet- . ing cyber-dino aurs, dogs, cats and oth· er critters are also selling well. "Nollody called in.

II's one of the most amazing Ihings," Tel spokesperson Andrew Johnson said Monday.

The score. by the way, was Hawaii 34, Northridge 21. "If you wanted 10

watch one of the halves, the first half was the one. I have no comment on Adam & Eve. Butthat wasn't our doing," Northridge coach Jim Fenwick said.

By Maggie Jackson Associated Press

Cheryl Kaiser thought that letting her son have a virtual pet would teach him responsibility, until the night she and her husband found themselves sleeping next to the cyber-cri tter.

When it began to beep at 2 a.m., her husband sat up and said, "I'm 50 years old! I can't be doing this!" And she yelled in return, "You can't let It die!"

Just as Moms and Dads end up clean­Ing the cat box and taking Fido for walks, so parents are being pressed into service - often reluctantly and sometimes with embarrassment - as caretakers of the

it's a.11 in the

"I thought at first it was neat, but it ended up being a parental thing," said Kaiser, a spokesperson for WFD work­family consultants in Boston. "They're a pain in the neck."

Tamagotchi, the original computer pet, took U.S. markets by storm in May after proving a hit in Japan. Some 4.5 million Tamagotchi - a name derived from the Japanese words for egg and watch - have sold in this country for

Once activaled, the toys beep from every few seconds to every few hour . ff the owner doesn 't preS8 buttons to answer the p t's demands, the pet dl - a traumatic turn for a young m tcr, although the toy can be rea t to pro· duce another creature.

"Kids were going to the bathroom to feed their pets, or having to think about who was going to watch them," said David Engelson, principal of an el men­tary school in Vernon, Conn ., who banned cyberpets in June. "It wu putting a lot of stre 8 on them."

Schools in Michigan, Texas, California, Rhode isLand, Virginia and Washington state have imposed bans thi fall term, and many camps did thla Bummer.

.' , ·S·YA·RS·,···,··,········ .. ··········· .. ···· iioii'oSCOPES' BY 'EUGEN'IA 'LAST·············,········· .. ,·············,·· .. ··· .. ··· September 12, 1997 Celebrltl .. bora on tbls d.,: Linda Gray, George Jones, Maria Muldaur. Maurice Chevalier HIPPY Blrthd.,: Your ,racllcal nature will lead you to success this year. All the long hours, dedication and determination will start to payoff. You've been patient and willing to do things by the book, and now

, you 'll be able to start setting the rules yourself. Don·t hesitate to Implement your Ideas and push your beliefs. This Is your

, year to excel. Your numbers: 4,9, t 8,22,30,44 ARIES (Mm:h 21·AprIl1.1: Your ability to visualize will help you convince others of the possibilities. You can make wonderful contributions to any organ I alion that you join.

The Daily Iowan

f.;ENERAL INFORMATION

~lendir Policy: Announcements for the section must be submitted to :rhe Dally Iowan newsroom, 201 N Communications Center, by 1 p.m. two days prior te publication. Notices may be sent through the reai I, but be sure to mail early to ensure publication. All submissions must be clearly printed on a Calendar column blank (which appears on the classified ads pages) or typewritten and triple-spaced on.a full sheet of paper. • : • Announcements will not be aCcepted over the tetephon~. All submissions must include the name and phone number, which will not be published, of a contact person in

TAURUS (April 20·M., 201: You will have difficulties Iinishing projects that you start. Extravagance and time will work against you. Don·t promise to deliver the goods if you aren't posnive that you can meet the dead· line, GEMINt (M., 21·June 201: You will have a real need to be vocal. Make sure that you make plans to attend group discussions or get togelher with friends who like to talk as much as you do. . CANCER (Jue 21·Jlly 221: Be cautious who you deal with financially. Deception is proba· bl~ if you don 't use discrimination. You may have difficulties with someone close to you. LEO (July 2Hul. 221: Your partner will make you angry If he/she steals your Ihunder or embarrasses you in front ot others. Oon 't cause a scene, but when you get home, let your partner know how you feel and why.

\

case of questions. Notices that Me commercial

advertisements will not be accepted. Questions regarding the Calendar

column should be clirected to the Metro editor, 335-6063.

Correctionl~ The Dilly IOWin strives for accuracy and fairness in the reporting of news. If a report is wrong or misleading, a request for a correction or a c1arilication may be made by contacting the Editor at 335-6030. A correctiorl or a clarifica­tion will be published I the announcements section,

Publishing Schedule: he Dally Iowan is pulillshed by Stu~ent Publications Inc., 111 I

Communlcations Center, Iowa City,

VIII GO (Aul. 23·S.pl. 221: YOU 'll have some of the best opportunities crop up if you keep an open mind. You just need to follow through on some of the good Ideas Ihat come your way. LIBRA (S.pt. 23·0ct. 221: Deception In your home Is evident. Don·t beat around the bush. Be honest If you wish to solve the problem. ReSidential moves are probable. Don·t expect the whole family to be overjoyed. SCOR~IO (Oct. 23·NOY. 211: Travel will pro­mote romantic connections. You will com· munlcate easily and will be able to develop new friendships. Involvement In groups will be beneficial and lead to valuable Informa­tion. SAGITTARIUS (Now. 22·0.c. 21): You can form good business pprtnershlps. Talk to those In a position of power about your Intenllons. Problems with skin. bones 01' teeth may mess up your schedule. .

CAPRICORN (D.c. 22-..... 11):Your cruhve talenls will surface through your response to situations. A sensitfve approach Will enabl. you to appeal to those you love for help AQUARIUS (J.n. 2H.,. "1: Romantic opportunities may not be as they appear Build on the friendships rather than stan,"o out In an Intimate encounler. Don't reveal Inlormallon that Is personal or confidential. PISCES (F.b. 11·Mareh 21): Insincere ges­tures of friendliness are likely to occur Avoid functions that will bring you In contact with Ihose you find difficult to get along with You will do better In one·on-one encounters lhan In group funcllons.

Need advice? Check out Eugenla 's Web site at www ..... nt.I .... c.m or try her Inter.c, tlve site at ..... ltro .. vlcl.Com.

Iowa City's Morning Newspaper

Iowa 52242, daily except Saturdays, Sundays, legal holidays and universi· ty holidays, and unive~ity vacatl6ns. Second class postage paid at the Iowa City Post Office under the Act of Congress of March 2, ', ~79 . POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Dally Iowan, 111 . Communications Center, .lowa City, Iowa 52242. .

Subscription rates: Idwa City and Coralville, $ 15 for one semester, $30 for two semesters, $10 for summer session, $40 for full year; Out of town, $30 for one semester, $60 for two semesters, $15 for summer ses­sion/ S 7 5 all year.

USPS 14]]·6000

STAFF Publisher ............... . Editor ........ . Manlgin~ Editor , ...... . Copy Chief ................... . Metro Editors ....... .. ..... . Vlew~ints Editor Sports Editor ... .. .. Arts Editor .......... .. Desl~ Editor.. ... . ........ .

~:c MIc:.:!I~or ......... :::::::::: . Photo Editor . . ... . Buslnes, Manaser Advertiling Manager ... Classified M Manager Circulation Manager .... Day Production Manager ..

~t~:~~I.~.~nager

IOWA WOMEN'S SOCCER CLUB Inform.rlon.' MHtlng

Tues. Sept. 16 5:30-6:30

Hubbard Park (~r;ng soccer gea, If abI,)

Open to graduate & ~

For que8~01\8 or Informaoon, n H.ldl Roeck, 0.11 s.tbold

358-6740 339-0370

How oft('n do you han' Iii IIl'r Sl'X~

J

••

The Cri and

Continu i . Crisis Intervention Screening

nat ~ayh

tu

The Daily Iowan · Iowa City. Iowa· Friday. September 12. 1997 • SA

THINK ABOUT WHAT YOU'RE

NOT ABOUT WHAT IT'S

TALK FOR AS LITTLE AS lO¢ A MINUTE.

RLAX. FI

conyer ation.

ISH YOUR

Because wi th

th two exceptional rate plans, airtime

on )'our side. Choo e 400 minutes

20 k, 200 off-peak) for 40 a

m nth, or choose 600 mmutes (300

k 30 off"- k) for 60. Either

• you'll pay little as lOt a minute.

And you'll have plenty of time to enjoy

(h clarity 0 our) 00% digital, 100%

network.

th 1 ar alternative to .

rl n

Hul r today.

Far better protection against eavesdropping

and number theft

No long-term contracts required

Voicemail, Caller ID, Call Waiting and

Three-Way Calling included

First incoming minute free in your Sprint pes

Home Service AreaSM

,

·~Sprin 1-800-480-4PCS" www.sprintpcs.com Sprint PCS~

print PCS unlet Squan: Mall tAh Lane, A6

CcdM Rapids ( 19) 2 4·6100

Sptint PCS Center Crossroads hopping Ctntcr 22nd and Univcrsiry West Des Moines (515) 327-3900

t 4 • • ~t t.j ~ 'ft '." t_fltCH" It" ( t'UI ••• hrr r' mil .... . tim.U.' •• f 'OIU~ln t4 0, 100 'flak ! lOO O((Puk Ind ' 60 . "00 Pr.It , '00 orr Pui Minute lnoJ Mond.}' Nilhn Prrr .nd Clur orfen ",lid only (ot nt .... cu"'ulont In the .1t1 1H_ - t_ ,.nfl.t' (Iff .. ,. •• It,u, t. cretin .,:'p,onl (.111 'u" 0"111111' w"h.n '1lIIom". ha"" Iff"'(~ un bu_."" , p III. ... d I t pm, 10 reCtlYf fr, ' • .rel"" on Mund.,. OIflhu ' <40,200 Pule. 200 O((. Pt'. k .nd , 60 ,00 Puk , JOO

t •• , ' • .J t 'u ' If nff' '''''1 Jet 1I,",h Me,h'" Nllhfl F," uti (.In, OUtr .pplill (rom lI .. f.r .tlif'ttlan unril 12119197 LlmtuJ · rlmt off" Off" ubltc:t ' 0 "lthdflw.1 without notHt 0 19~ 1 Sprtnt'Specrrum L.P,. ft. , ,, 'fill t • tI "" It ,,"'UP" "'p'.' L,P. Olttl .. 4" lIun., PUllt,t .lId S""," '.u.n.1 l. . ",,"u,, lutioft """ttt . te 'f.d .f'l'tu lu ud .,nj(t mark. of Sprint Communiurlun. Comp.,.y l p" "'I,d undtt lIe,n"

, · . . · ; . -:

" · ~ "'.

, . . .

6A - The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Friday. September 12, 1997

MARCH/Women hoping for change through solidarity corttilluedfrom Page 1A Others believe that the march is are heading the March, said through the March , which Chionesu said

another step toward educating collective efforts, the road map can isn't true. M,tJi~m Man March, she said. themselves. be determined to regain control of "The reality is that (the media)

., think it's great," Akyea said. " I~l bigger than unity. It will be incredible to have blacks from all are>Und here. Black women have beeil at the forefront of every strug­gle.: They shoulder the burden of laber and are under-compensated."

"I believe that African-American their families, strengthen their are for it not making a change,· eh women must be the change agents foundation and acknowledge the said. "We will no longer allow them in our society because more than strengths that exist within them. to mandate us." ever, we need qualified, committed "This is not a feminist move- Chionesu said she and her co-work-and, capable emissaries," said Lam- ment," Chionesu said . "Black ers have toiled for morc than a year to ant Flowers, a graduate student in women have taken care of white see the march become a reality.

VI students have expressed a sin­cer. desire to attend the march.

the VI College of Education. children, men, families and other "Black people will never be the

~If the (financial) means presents it.<;clf to me, I will take advantage of th~in,· said Jade Rogers, a graduate stll4ent in African-American world stuClies. "I think that this is a won­detfuI opportunity for black women to wme together to reflect upon our pa~, examine the present and peer in~the future of possibilities."

"I feel the March is crucial to the people . When are black women same," she said. "From this ev nt, maintenance of the African-Ameri- going to take care of themselves?" the lives of black men, women and can experience," she said. "The Winnie Mandela, ex-wife of South children will be set in motion to March demonstrates a renewed African President Nelson Mande1a, is obtain further upliftment and qual· interest in unity and understand- scheduled to speak along with Julia itative changes." ing among African-American Wright, daughter of Harlem Renais- The theme of the march is, "the women. It reflects the persistence sance poet Richard Wright, and Con- day of repentance, resurrection and and brilliance of black women in gressperson Maxine Waters, who chairs restoration." their struggle to overcome adversi- the Congressional Black Caucus. "We are putting our re80urces ties to make a difference." Chionesu said Waters was quoted together. We've got to do it for our·

Chione8u and three others, who in the media as not knowing about selves," Chionesu said.

GOLDEN/ Canterbury steps into the spotlight

TRIALILaw students face the Supreme Court

cdrrJinued from Page 1A ~

said. "So that's when I started,"

Continued from Page 1A

the students are in their third year. Third-year law student Christine

Conover is one of the two students selected to argue on behalf of the state.

"This is a huge honor for me,· Conover said. "It is a little intimidat­ing to represent the UI in front of the state justices and the rest of my class­mates, but I know we will do fine."

Moot Court team members are selected solely on merit. Thirty-two students start out in the argument

and they are narrowed down to six, team captain Shaatir Pepukayi said .

The case was selected by the New York Bar Association and adapted from the National Moot Court com· petition.

Ironically, the Iowa State legisla­ture passed the Sex Offender Regis­tration Act after the Moot Court team had already argued the Moot case to become members of the team.

Mishra said it will be difficult for him and his teammates to try this case because they already know

~en at the age offive, she start­ed.making the yearly trip to Notre Dallle for the National Competi­tiOq where she competes against twirlers from across the country.

Last summer she was named the Grand National Collegiate Twirling Champion at the National Competition competing against other college twirlers.

MARKET /Beer business booming

~1 spent four to six hours a day training for nationals," she said. "It's really nerve-wracking. 1 just practice over and over and over."

Nter winning the nationals, Canterbury then went on to com­pete at . the World Open where she was named the 18-year-old World O~n Twirler.

"I have so many trophies we have most of them boxed up in the attic, " she said. ·We keep the recent ones and the ones from the National1burnaments out."

danterbury practices two hours a d~y for five days a week with the Ul band. She choreographs most of her: own routines except for a com­petition set.

Canterbury said she ' enjoys twilling both on the field and for competition. .

"On the field they like to see dif· fe rent tricks than they do in com­vetition," she said. "They don't pay mu~h attention to the difficulty of thC'tricks."

Some tricks Canterbury incorpo­rate$ into her routines include lin­ger. ~wir1s, horizontal twirls, neck rolts, rolls on the body, mouth spins and spinning or tumbling under a big:tpss.

'The game crowds really like to see how high you can toss it," she said.

Continued from Page 1A

rose Ave., has been serving loyal Iowa Hawkeye fans for the past 50 years.

The market maintains a atmos­phere during home games that co· owner Chris Kleinmeyer caned "controlled mayhem."

. Kleinmeyer estimated that close to 5,000 customers raid his estab­lishment on game days equaling three weeks of normal volume. He said that the store still manages to maintain control despite the mass quantities of alcohol served there.

"We have three Sheriff's deputies here on Saturdays, two inside and one outside the doors . We also have four individuals who managed bars in town here to check IDs," Klein­meyer said. "We haven't had an arrest in my ten years here."

Melrose employee John Gay said that Iowa City has other areas that are more chaotic than their store.

"!t's pretty regulated if you ask me . There's always the typical drunk, but downtown Iowa City's a lot crazier than this," Gay said.

The regulation close to the store has been noticed by customers of the market as well. VI senior Kevin Kel­ley said that he was with an under­age drinker who was ticketed when handed a beer outside of the store.

Kelley said he is still a loyal patron of the market at halftime of football games.

"The Melrose Market is a game day icon. It's a good place to go at halftime to hang out with people

and get wasted," Kelley said. "Pret­ty much it's the closest place to the stadium to buy alcohol."

Kleinmeyer said that the store goes through busy spells before the game, during halftime, and after the game. He said that he starts getting busier as early as Friday morning.

"Football Saturday starts on Fri­day morning at 8:00. On Saturday we have 20-25 people working. Friends and family come in and help out,· Kleinmeyer said.

Business was hurt badly this winter when Melrose Avenue was under heavy construction. Competi­tion from local supermarkets and convenience stores has also reduced business. Kleinmeyer said that cus­tomers from football games and hospital workers won't go away.

"The hospital is actually a bigger draw than football games because it is there 365 days a year. Football Saturdays are a chance for us to get back what we lost though,· he said.

Kleinmeyer is confident that the relationships with people in the store will keep them coming back.

"I'm a people guy. We open the doors every day and throw the dice," he said. "There's three or four times that we should have failed but we're still here.n

Kleinmeyer has built friendships with many VI athletes and coaches over the years.

"We fed Ross Verba many donuts before he was ever in the NFL. Hayden Fry's favorite's are oatmeal raisin cookies and bagels," he said.

NAILS/Bye, bye, blue nails - . clear is back Con.inued from Page 1A

and 1 think it's expensive and over­rated."

However, for those students who do'thoose to pay the price for nice nails, fingernail color choices range from end to end of the color spec­tnua. Colors this fall vary/from the ver:! dark colors, such as browns, to th~~ore natural or clear colors.

Morano said she prefers darker colors for her nails. ~ames Tran, an employee at La

N a;tJs, said he sees more people

going to a clear or natural color for nails, but that can change with the time of year.

"It depends on the person or sea· son, 'lthich color-they prefer," he said.

Machele Plifer, employee at Tips Full Service Salon, 412 Highland Ave., also said the new fall colors for nails were lighter.

"Many of the new colors coming in are neutrals but with a bit more col­or, like browns and reds," she said.

Shannon Cleveland, owner of King Stingray's 128 112 E. Wash-

lBEFOREYOU .. iMAKEYOUR ~NExTMOVE ...

As an international company with more than 117 years of experience and ,56 billion in assets under management, The Principal Financial Group is O1le of the nation's leaders in financial services. We recruit talented people 8$s provide the training and technology they need to meet customers' el(pectations. The Principal Financial Group is looking for employees who ~ ready to meet the challenges and demands of today ..

Whether you're looking for a career or internship in investments, business, ~unting or information systems, we may have the perfect match for you.

jJe encourage )'OU to stop at the International Job Fair on Wednesday, ~tember 24, at the Memorial Union, to talk with our Corporate ~ement Representatives.about the various positions available.

~'re looking forward to viSiting with you.

" j

tIII~ "":';hf

YIHIT .d,. '" fit. futu" ... B. "rile/"t E ....

ington St., said she sees darker brown colors as the trend with French manicures.

Kinnieburew said he is seeing a trend for men's nails.

"I keep seeing guys with their nails painted dark colors, it seems strange," he said.

Some students purchase highly expensive acrylic tips, which are attached to actual nails, which extend the lengths of their nails.

"Most people start with fake nails or a manicure, and acrylic is the most popular," Tran said .

• ~UI' 114 .. u.·337 ... ,. V'.2 I.tt Try Our H III Yummy-

,,' ~ Delicious ~.t~ \'~ Oatmeal!

.,' I, GMm'OllUfAILAIU

THE

Master Class at West High School,

Friday, Sept. 12 at 3:30 p.m.

how the justices would ru1 on it. "We had to change a few minor

details to try to persuade the ju.­tices to view the issues from ollr standpoints," Mishra said.

The Chief Justice of the Iowa Supreme Court founded the Ullaw school in 1865. The mock court ses· sion is one of several events in the century·old tradition of Supreme Court Day at the Iowa law scbool.

Affirmllivc ACIlonJEqual Opponunity Employer Supportld by Cantebury Inn & Solt ...

Bush boot, Paddod boot, Country walk(lbvllt 'W

W".,prool oll-t.n~,d 11.111., Uptltr

• Maintains natural brt th b Iy

100% w.t'rproot loll • Repels Oils & barnyard aCid • Non· ~Id tread dHt9n

Built to Tak

":.'7..,,,'" ~OB-"."''' Voted Bt,ft Shll

WIll

AID

321 W .. "II i II!.!I Oil--- --

Nation

death rate declines

• • -

AIDS deaths Death from AIDS per 100,000 people age 25-44:

32 " 31.7 au 2ft .•

23.3 28.5 .

1990 '91 '92 '93 '9-4 '&5 '96

Teen birth rate Age group 15-17 per 1,000 birth.

5U 12.1 au 5U 5&.1 5U 54.7

1990 '91 '92 '93 '94 '95 '96 Soun:a: Ct!qr lot diIeaM oorW tnd ptMnllon

APlCarl Fox

Among other findings: - Life expectancy in the United

State reached 76.1 years in 1996, up slightly from 75.8 years in 1995.

- The nation's homicide rate dropped 11 percent to 8.4 homicides per 100,000 people in 1996, down from 9.4 in 1995.

The CDC's report was based on information from birth and death

1be worllerJ of AM would like to ~M....,.ne our new 15197 members

-

Lat

Megan Manella Erin Murphy Kathryn Nicholl Kelly O'Gorman Julie Panas Andrea Pear on Van a Pryor Rachel Pl'7.tar ki )es ica Rechkemmer

andi Schab K therine Schmit

mily chonam Michelle oren on

icole tout Jenny tover Li a Thomp on Laura Veltman Katie Wol fer berger

• - Mil - MIl -

ISES

'ar hingl

• I wa ity, Iowa 52240

" • The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Friday, September 12. 1997 - 7 A

KGAN·TV PRESENTS THE

Win A 1998 Ford'Escort IX2

Two-Year Lease

Play Games Based On Your Favorite CBS Shovvsl

BRING THIS AD TO GET YOUR FREE CBS SPORTS SHORTS!

If you're one of the first 10 people who p~esents this ad at the CBS Information Center at 1:00 PM.

GOOO;!YEAR J(/ • " r /-':U;..,.J--

~OR~AL PAR I S

..

8A -The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Friday, September 12, 1997

oints "'t's bigger than unity. It will b Incredible to h ve bla k been at the forefront of every struggle. Th y houlder Ih sated."

lPefending ..

: a way of life • • • :tn action " •

:and writing : M y father must have been the perfect pic-• ture of a working-class stereotype: shirt-• le88 and wild-haired, Pabst Blue Ribbon - in one hand, twelve-gauge rifle in the

other. His oil-stained jeans hung low on • his hips, and his neck was burned red from road work. He looked like a moonshiner hiding in the Mississippi brush.

The neighbor's hound dogs were howling again, and : Dad was making good on a threat. My sister and 1

peeked through the back door of the garage, half hor­rified, half ashamed.

We knew he wouldn't shoot the dogs, but we also knew what other families said about us.

Our neighbor turned on the cold tap of his garden • hose and sprayed the dogs quiet. He stared at my d~d,

barely able to speak through his laughter. "That qUiet enough for ya, Clitl?"

Dad walked back to the house with h}s head down. "I shou1d report him for that: he said, "and for the

dog he put to sleep with a bul­let last week." He slid his gun onto a high shelf in the garage. "Supposed to be the vet that does it."

He'll never know how much his anger shaped my

sister and me.

Karrie Higgins

We were ashamed of his private war against the world, not because we thought less of him, but because he thought less of himself. He hated

coming home with his dirty hands wrapped around a lunch cooler. Hated driving a rust-stained Chevy.

His hate needed an outlet. Sometimes, that meant pointing guns at howling hound dogs.

My sister and I were determined to direct our anger elsewhere. To craft beauty from pain. My sister took up ballet. I remember peeking down the basement stairs and seeing only her legs. She practiced pirou­ettes for hours, spinning away entire afternoons. I found her more beautiful than the plastic ballerina which spun in my music box. . .

Sometimes our paperboy would practice with her in the garage. He was from the wealthy side of Cedar Rapids and owned fancy toe shoes, costumes and clas­sical records. A student of two prestigious dance schools, he helped her refine her steps.

But some things were written on her body like scars. Her steps were too "street-style" and her legs too long for ballet. She could never dance center stage or be lifted into a leap. She gave up ballet for ball­room. The paperboy now dances with the Boston Bal­let.

Later my sister studied art part time, got married and had a son. But she has not escaped her shame. She struggles daily with the fact she lives in a trailer park. "I'm trailer trash: she says when old acquain­tances ask where sHe lives. Her feigned hillbilly accent and false laughter barely conceal her pain. I can only hope her son doesn't hear the trembling in her voice.

": in fiction and essays as well. But the Literary I found my release in poetry. Later, I would find it

> Establishment has its prejudices, too. 1 was -.' admitted to a workshop with twelve other stu-: dents last spring. I remember feeling jealous of

the memories they crafted into poems. Fathers play­ing the flute to them before bed, moonlit nights in New England, hours watching ducks fly over a pond, exotic flowers and sea voyages. One of my poems was ~urned with the comment, "This isn't your real fami­ly, right?"

How sweet it must be to think families like mine /lfen't real, to smell flowers in New England and write about them. Perhaps they didn't - or couldn't -

. {lnderstand that I wrote about my father's gun

. because I had to. I couldn't rest without letting it out, and this isn't the same feeling as nostalgia.

Looking back on my father's rivalry with our neigh­bor, I laugh a little like my sister does when she calls herself "trailer trash." I think my father felt he had to fi,ht something to maintain his pride. And isn't that what these words are about, too?

JWrie HiggInf column appears Fridays on the Viewpoints pages.

-LfTTEIS POLICY letters to the editor must be signed and must Include the writer's address and phone num­ber for verification. Letters should _not ,xceed .. 00 words. The Daily 10WIIl r~rves the right to edit for length and clarity. The Daily Iowan will publish only one letter per author per month, and letters will be chosen for publication by the editors according to . space considerations. letten can be sent to The Daily /owim at 201 N Communications Center or via e-mail to [email protected]. . •

• 0Pt~1O(tfS ex~ on the Viewpoints Pages d The . Daily /owan are those of the sipM!d authors. The DIlly Iowan, • a nonprofit c:orporltion, does not express opinions on these JnItlers. .00ESI.9PIN1ONS .... altiCles on current !slues writ­IItn by mders r:I The CWy Iowan. The D/ weIcomei luest opinion.; submission. should be typed and ' Iigned, ~ should not eJaed 750 words In lenath. A brief biopphY, _Id accompIfty all .ubmltllons. The

IoWan 'NteMs the riFt to edit for length, style

Mc1>utu. Sese Seko: 1930-1997

~--

Where are the rock concerts? By now, UI students and Iowa

City residents are all too familiar with the grueling

trek necessary to witness any large concert in the area

Because Carver-Hawkeye Arena has, in recent years, been deemed unsuitable for hosting marquee events, Iowa City residents have often found themselves having to travel to cities such as Ames, Cedar Rapids and the Quad Cities in sear.ch of big n8lJles.

Thus, an extended drive has become as much a part of the con­cert experience as loud music and overpriced T-shirts.

But it needn't be. Bands such as R.E .M., Ozzy

Osborne, Bush and The Steve Miller Band have all bypassed Iowa City in recent years to play at the more concert-friendly Hilton Coliseum at Iowa State University in Ames. Meanwhile, artists such as Smashing Pumpkins and Bob Dylan have made the Quad Cities their venue of choice.

Iowa City, in the meantime, hasn't hosted an act of significant magnitude since Nine Inch Nails appeared in 1994.

Such a drought is curious, given Iowa City's large student popula­tion - a demographic widely tar-

geted by concert organizers. Why, then, must one drive from this col. lege town to one nearly three hours away in order to check out someone like Rod Stewart?

The reason usually given is that Carver-Hawkeye Arena has too many faults in its rigging and lighting systems to host a rock con­cert.

At the Nine Inch Nails concert, small-scale rioting reportedly caused substantial damage to the arena's infrastructure.

Since then, the arena has been closed off to shows such as this, leaving bands to play at sites such as the lMU Ballroom and Hubbard Park, if they even visit Iowa City at all.

The Student Commission on Pro­gramming and Entertainment (SCOPE), which is responsible for arranging events affiliated with the university, cites limitations such as this for its inability to attract significant mU1licians. In addition to Carver, Hancher Audi­torium is basically inaccessible as well.

Because Hancher books its acts anywhere from 18 months to three years in advance, tour organizers find it virtually impossible to find a slot in Hancher's schedule.

However, it appeara th.t changes may loom ahead . At ttl urging of SCOPE production., Carver-Hawkeye recently under· went renovations to adju.t it. lighting, thus bringing it one .tep closer to hosting formidable rock names once agllin.

The qu.estion, then, is wh ther or not SCOPE will be able to act. upon this ability to draw more promi­nent performers to fowa City

According to a SCOPE repre n­tative , the wheels are in motion . Ani DiFranco is t to play at th IMU Ballroom in Octobet, and lh organization is working on attract­ing more headliner. to the area. ·We're working on getting more shows. Right now, it'. a matter or getting our schedule coordjnat d with the artists''-

At this poLnt, the Signs &J1I look­ing positive. Of course, when a city hasn't had an arena-siz d ct in three years, there aren't too many places to go but up. With impro menta being made on Carver­Hawkeye, a lack of uailable venues is less of an eJtcuae.

The bsll is in SCOPE's eourt, th time to revive the locel conc rt scene is now.

Jesse Nnmenn.1n IS an edll and UI sophomore.

Change the channel on pageant The Miss America Pageant

will be'aired Saturday night, but is there a reason to

watch? • The pageant has been a tradition

in this country dating to 1921, a contest to discover the ideal woman of the age. The annual com­petition is one of the few times when every state can battle it out against one another; in this case seeing which one has the most beautiful and "talented" lady.

The pageant certainly serves a purpose, but it is not necessary' to televise it, let alone watch.

One of the major issues involved in this year's pageant is that, according to the Miss America Organization, "[Oor the fIrst time in the [plageant's 77 -year history, each contestant will be allowed to wear either a one- or two-piece suit of her choosing, rather than one provided by the [p]ageant." This is sure to draw in many male view­ers, but "Baywatch" fe!ltures more scantily clad women.

Another reason not to watch is that the show is too boring. No one wants to hear about how each con­testant believes she can single-

readers

handedly change the world by encoUraging literacy or protecting rain forests.

The system of judging the con­testants is farcical at best. One cat­egory in which the judges rate the women is 'on-stage personality in evening wear." That is not a quali­ty that comes to mind when one thinks of the ideal woman.

None of this is to say that the pageant should be discontinued entirely. Many .good things can come from it. It provides a lot of scholarship money. It onen gives the careers of the contestanta a lit­tle boost. An important step in race relations came in 1970, when Cheryl Brown, Mi88 Iowa, was the first Mrican-American contestant in the pageant's history.

An<!ther thing to be said for the pageant is that this year it is final· Iy catching up with the times. Biki­nis are very popular nowadays, and the change to that option reflects the modern atyle rather than something representing a more 1950s qUality.

Pageants auch a8 Miss America, Miss Universe, Miss USA and 10 on do not serve a general public

need. They are nne to 10 on by themselves, but televisin, t m i. another matter. It I. the sam uneventful proce every year; I.b contestants stroll around in go and make politically correct .tate­ments. They sin" dance and play musical instruments. Then (mally they don their lwimsuitl and how the viewers what they tuned in for in the first place.

Pageantl in general have nO effect on the lives of their vi wert. Thia can be said about many pro­grams on television, but at I aat people watch tho for I superfl· cia I rea80lUI. It i. lamentabl that America places 80 much emph it on a conteat that has little red m­ing social value.

What viewers tune in for I' to see pretty women in balhina sulta. and that'. the bottom line. Sex and glamour are being 80Id at the MI America Pageant, but it mak: on wonder what the attraction of child pageant. il. Th pageant hu aoocI intention., but then .,ain, 10 d Communism.

J.It. Hausen i an editor! I writer nd UI junior.

.•..............................................•......••••••••••••••••••••••.••••..••••••••••••••.•••...••...••••••

SAY What's your problem?

"The Cambuses not being on time."

SI,.~ Dlrdllmld Ullunlor

" Classes too early in the morning, and teachers that don't speak EngliSh."

.IUIG"I, UI freshman

" English. " Ell"'..,. liED student

J

.. Foreign professors that I can't under-stand. "

koIt~ UI freshman

.. , have no prob­lems. Life Is cool."

.... hIII UI junklr

Listen up: Advice i better lat than ne e

up: • e 1

lat nvr

Viewpoints

'A m ssage about the media nd und rBtandlng what media i8 nd doell. E pecial\y now. Just wh n I thought r had media

figure d out, I wind up in KRUl', tudio discus Ing on r the blgg st tories of th d cad with a slew of m die prot .Ional. In n environm nt that i. com­pial Iy unf millar , even

.. -

Matt Snyder

ali n, to me. Within seconds of walking into the studio, I could fcel the elec­tric atm08phere, th imm dlacy of r diD . They had po t d a pi c of p p r where the

OJ could it plain­ly . In bold let­t rI it r ad, "NO DEAD AIR." r likened to

public responsible fQr wanting sen­sational information? Should the media provide people with what they want or what they need? Is there a distinction between various media outlets, i.e. are the tabloids different from the so·called main-tream press? We di8CU8~d these

types of questions and more for a solid hour.

My conclusions? stln wholly unresolved. True, 1 do have a nrm idea of what the answers are to some of these questions. I think the med ia shOUld bring people both want they want and what they need. But as Ii whole, the issue of what are the media will be up for debate as long a8 there are media.

Unresolved is exactly how I felt walking out of the studio. There wa8 so much we didn't address. So many i sues were left unanswered. My own thoughts on the matter were incomplete. I don't have all the answer8. A little humbling to be sure, but I have every confi­dence I will continue to make good decisions as editor of the Dl.

J did come away from "Face 011" with one painfully clear notion, however. I entered what I thought was just a new medium, radio, and left behind any ideas that I could ever completely understand the media.

Malt Snyder is edi tor of The Daily Iowan.

t reotype isn't pretty although nearly everyone in the country is mestizo. On the other, young American women are good busin 8S, at least by rep'ltation . We drink to get drunk, unlike Mex­icans in the same clubs who dance, smoke and talk to eac h other. We're more receptive to pick-up lines and tend to be less conserva­tive sex ually than our Mexican counterparts.

My friend, a native of Mexico City, tells me that some of us act like we don't have any resJ)eCt for ourselve . She's seen the evidence nrsthand during her Bummer job at a bar in the resort town of Ixta­pa. There, the waiters she works with get a steady supply of casual sex with American college girls. Those kinds of case studies , in combination with the visions of Irillg~ in the movie that are pop­ular here, make it hard to get any­one to take us seriously.

So we keep studying the culture and learning the language, all the "hi! trying to nnd more ways of blending in. We try to be unobtru-

• lIVe, S8Y por favor and gracias and keep our wits about U8 when we dance and drink.

And of cour e, not all the men ,haul, or even notice my gringa companion and me as we make our way around the city. Some just want to practice their English, ask why We're here or give uS their

ats on the bus. ThOle who know us better say

they appreciate our American directne and naturalness. So on th days when we want to isolate ourselves from the stare8 or change the color of our hair, those are th peppi we try to remember.

And it11 all be back to average in • r, w month when I go back to the ta . 'rh re, I'm not eVen blonde.

rah Lueck i a UI junior studying in Me iLO Ity

You n enroll any time In University of Iowa au did Correspondence Study courses. The

mea.., begins when you choose. You receive ndlvldUllattentton from your course Instructor, set your own piCe, and take up to nine months to compl4tt • ch course.

GCS COUrt can help you stay on track to g dua on time or even earlyl They can allow you to lance your study and work schedules or allow you Xl,. t to con ntrate on your major.

Mo than 160 courses are avallablt, including many that aalitfy University of Iowa General

ducatlon Program requirements.

Phont or stop by today to receive. GeS court catalog. Brows our Web pages, view GCS COO Information, and requ 8t I catalog It:

http://www.ulow •. edti .. cap

eo"..pondenoe 'tudr ~t ....... OrMIt " .........

....... " .f c ... __ ........... The UnlwenIty of leWI

" •• "' ........... 0 ...... ,t1tU1oU7I- ' ..... 7 •• .,0 .........

,

"

The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Friday, September 12, 1997 - 9A

"The;r 114"" suggests a land so rifb, honey /16urs from the slone, They sptak 10 us with lush, perfect harmonies a"J

pOwerful rifeting Iyrifs of the wonder and slra;n of being Bird wonun on Ihis platul.".

SEPTEMBER 13, 8 P.M. ·,Essence Magazine

SIGN LANGUAGE INTERPERATlON PROVIDED For TICKET INFORMATION call 319/335-1160 ort<*-Iroe In lowe and _tm IUInOis 1-800-HANCHER

For TOO and access services call 319/335-1158: Discounts avallabl~ for Senior Citizens, UI Students and Youth

S10 UI student tIc kets avaIl able

Hancher25 · http://www·UIOwLedu/~hanoher/ Supported by The Gazette.

IA-macromedia'

Rabbi laureate of Temple Israel, Natick, Massachusetts, and author of When Bad Thlnlll HagpcntoOogd

~andlism Qgod Do We Have [0 Be?

Take advant;ege of t;heae valuable rebat; •• avallabla at your campua bookstore t;hraugh 10·31.97,

Dlrec or B Multimedia Studio Explore the most powerful tools for multimedia and the Web.

Free an Grephlc Studio 7 Explore the most powerful design tools for print and internet graphics.

$ Fr. an 7 Explore the most powerful design tool lor print and internet graphics.

Fla Explore Ihe easiest way to create fast Web multimedia.

'See specially marked boxes at your campus bookstore lor delalls. Director 6 wHh Electronic Documentation available to students and lacuHy only. 2906.8.97.

, .

.,

Monday, September 15; 1997 ~ ' 7:30 p.m., Main Lounge, IMU

A~l1IdIli for Harold Kuahner IIIIde tb~ the B'na! 8'r;th ~ Buteau . •

,

/

lOA - The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Friday, September 12, 1997

World

Scots say 'aye' to parliament, no to taxes • Scots approve a separate parliament to prolong domestic affairs.

By Maureen Johnson Associated Press

EDINBURGH, Scotland - Scots gave a thumping endorsement to creating their own Scottish Parlia­ment after 290 years of union with England, in partial returns from Thursday's referendum.

The results also showed support, though less enthusiasm, for giving the regional legislature limited authority over taxes.

"J am absolutely delighted that the Scottish people have backed our plans,' said Prime Minister Tony Blair, whose Labor Party had cam-

Glimpse at

U .. ili

Body retrieval dela,ed until divers arrive

MONTROUIS, Haiti (AP) - When the body floated to the surface of the sea the wailing started, overwhelming the angry shouts of relatives demanding quicker

paigned on creating the separate legislature before winning power in May.

"I said that we would deliver what we promised - and we have."

The creation of a Scottish Parlia­ment, which would be opened by 2000, would be the ,"ost significant change within the United Kingdom since Ireland won its independence in 1922.

It will keep Scotland. within the country with Queen Elizabeth II as its monarch, but have it assume responsibility for legislation on domestic affairs. The separate tax authority would allow the legisla­ture to increase, or decrease, exist­ing taxes by 3 percentage points.

With 18 of 32 districts counted Friday morning, the vote for the

recovery of scores drowned in a sunken Haitian ferry. •

Authorities suspended efforts to retrieve more victims from a ferry that sank Monday off Montrouis, killing an estimated 200 people, pending today's expected arrival of more, better-trained divers from the United States.

'The delay - divers have recovered only 79 bodies, plus the corpse that sur­faced on its own - prompted mobs to set tires on fire Wednesday to block Haiti 's main highway where it runs through the village.

Another body rose to the surface today, but the scene was quieter at Montrouis' beach, where tew people were gathered.

A woman at the beach' quickly identi­fied the body that floated up Wednesday,

saturday, september 13 lJU-4cf ... f ~ .. " .. , .. tt.c Mr.tt.c., . "" ..

featuring

f" ~eA ~~~ . """.i" ~~ ... ,l',,, e,/~, IlC/flf~ tk I~"'t tk,~ an alcohol-free Qvent brought to you with . the support o~ 1he S1epplng Up Project

parliament was running more than 70 percent ·yes,· with about 60 per­cent support for tax powers.

The vote was ·yes" even in East Renfrewshire, a prosperous com­muter area near Glasgow. Until the general election. in May, it was one of the last strongholds of the Con­servative Party, which strongly opposed the parliament.

"We sure did carry the day today,' said Scottish Secretary Donald Dewar, who led the government's campaign. "We have outperformed the polls ... even the most devoted believer in the Tory opposition can­not question our right to proceed."

The ·yes" votes rolled in Friday morning from the Western Islands to the Highlands and Borders. Among the first 12 districts to

crying, "My daughtert It's my daughterl" Authorities took the ollrpse to a morgue.

U.N. offiCials said only 50 people sur­vived the .sinking.

Ex-offtcers seek amnesty PORT EUZABETH, South Africa (AP) -Black activist Steve Biko was acting "stubborn and too big lor his boots" by defying police interrogators who ' killed him 20 years ago, an ex-officer acknowl­edged Thursday.

The "state order" in the 1970s was for blacks to obey whites, Harold Snyman

declare, two voted against tax pow­'era though they also support the parliament.

Turnout was about 66 percent, the British Broadcasting Corp . said.

Scotlan<\ "is in for a very xciting journey," said Alex Salmond, leader 'of the Scottish National Party, which campaigned for a ·yes" vote as a big stride toward its goal of independence.

The Nationalists get about a quarter of the VOle in Scotland. Among the rest, many have turned to Labor.

Labor also campaigned for a"y • vote but for a dilTerent reason: Th government hopes the parliament will help ensure Scotland will remain part of the United Kingdom.

told the Truth and Reconciliation Com­mission. "This was the thinking and the way things were done."

Snyman, 69, and the lour officers he commanded are seeking amnesty from the commission for the 1977 beating death of Blko. , One of South Africa's most popular

black leaders, Blko died on Sept. 12, 1977, six days alter suffering brain dam­age during the police interrogation.

He had preached that blacks should be proud ot their cunure and tak~ control of their country. His short /He - he was 30 when he died - was the sublect 01 tile 1987 film, "Cry Freedom," with Blko por­trayed by actor Denzel Washington.

Learn what it takes . to become aQU

DId )'OIl /moW AmeIfcane tpeIId _IfIIIIS7.SIIIIIIII.,..an Tax We /IIfIIIItIIfIan? JlIIt '*' ,....." GIIPOIfuIIIyAw you. SfIIp by II1II _ '-to ,.,., ..".".. money •• 1u ......,. 8ItI8t )'It, lind out .bout _ ~MflrHM.k.

$500 0,' Any Set of Wheelsl

• Powell Blank 0 c

ON JS 9'

Your special d I' has arrived from eli

Clinique's latest bonu i w itin k

,

during Clinique B nu W

It's all of your Clinique favorit friends to try. In a boxful f t ..

Skin care great . The lat t in m k up. And a toothbru h tray J .. ca t p Better Than Ever. Your p ci 1 charge with any Clinique pur h 1 You get:

DRAMATICALLY DIFF£Rl!NT M I kin' best-loved moi turt udnnk."

DAILY EYE BENEFlT , lightweight moi tur to th, mooth d ftrm th

Honey Bare B1!'iOND Bt. HI-:R WI'Tlf ApPlI A R. blendable, tay-put col r ~ r chce • lir, " .

Black GENnE WATERPROOF MA ARA, -m

Plum Raisin LIP-SHAPING PEN IL, mouth makeup e sential. Line and d -fln ,h 11'\ II

Honey Ginger DIfFERENT LI~ll K, thinII'. m 'tim •

NON. AEROSOL HAIR PRAY,

un ccnted, non- ticky. Give a nalur,t11 k, I in~ hold .

TOOTHBRU H HOLDER, a Iinlqu pc i (

Coometics

.aI!B3i1~ • SHOP YOVNKERS BY PHONE TOf.L.fREE: 1..se0.338-3183; IN DES MOINES

(UNIQUE, NK~ ,(515) 24fN163. ..

Allergy Tested. 100% Fragran~ Free. The Expert is in 24 hours a day: 1 . www.c1inique.com I STYLE • QUALITY.

~----'----~~--'------~.

ERVI

-

rricia,)i Sc1pt('1

48 - The Daily Iowan - Iowa City. Iowa - Friday, September 12, 1997

Could it be? Prarie ,

yiew may finally win By Jaime Aaron Associated Press

DALLAS - The folks around Prairie View A&M haven't been this excited about a football game in a long time, at least not for the last 69 Saturdays the Panthers have played.

Langston of the, NAJA is coming to town and the Lions, who started Prairie View's record losing streak in 1989, could possibly become the streak-busters.

Langston will be playing its first game under coach Ted Alexander, a high school coach making the jump to college. Alexander was hired after Greg Johnson took over at .. . Prairie View.

Johnson brought with him a new attitude, a record of success - and full knowledge of Langston's play­ers and its playbook.

" I think everyone has high hopes," Johnson said, both of his tenure and Saturday's game.

The Panthers seem to have re.ponded fairly quickly to their new coach and his staff. Although Prairie View lost its opener 32-16

to Texas Southern, the Panthers played well in spurts.

"The right pieces are in place to turn this thing around," Johnson said. "It's just a matter or putting the right pieces together at the right time."

Johnson seemed to figure out the puzzle at Langston. The school hadn't had a winning record in 20 season before he took over, then went 35-30 in his five years.

Five of his wins came over Prairie View, marking losses Nos. 16, 26, 38, 52 and 63 in the streak. He also was an assistant at Langston when tSe Lions beat the Panthers 19-18 on Nov. 4,1989, to begin the skid.

Almost eight years later, the clos­est Prairie View has come to victory was a 12-8 loss to Arkansas,Pine Bluff in November 1993.

Things haven't gone well off the field, either.

A financial scandal forced the can­cellation of the 1990 season. When the program was revived in 1991, it was done without scholarships.

Ron Beard tried and couldn't . Hensley Sapenter, a link to the

IOWA VS. TULSN Hawks want revenge Continued from Page IB

fact that Tulsa is coming off a loss. The Iowa coach said the Hurricane t raditionally come back strong after setbacks.

Tulsa had a 14-13 halftime lead against host Cincinnati on Aug. 28 . The Bearcats rallied for 21 second-balf points to pull out the victory. Fitzgerald was 18-for-40 for 277 yards, but Rader noted that Hurricane receivers had six drol?s.

John Mosley was Tulsa's primary

rusher in the season opener. He had 16 carries for 77 yards.

Iowa tailback Tavian Banks should have an opportunity to pad his already impressive statistics . Tulsa's defense gave up 362 yards on the ground to Cincinnati, while Banks piled up 203 against UNI.

Still, when Iowa and Tulsa meet each other, numbers are meaning­less.

"We've always had trouble with 'em,' Fry said . "Otherwise, they wouldn't be c\ose games all the time."

RIVALRY/Teams have an exciting history Continued from Page IB

back off from playing tough non­conference foes early in the season.

" I t is a great experience ," Neuheisel said . "This is why we do it . We don't schedule teams that we can beat 82-6. We don't schedule those tYJ>e of teams."

Neuheisel admits he can't take any credit for the schedule . He wasn't around when it was put together. Still, he believes this is what college football should be about.

But he feel s th e s ame way Neuheisel does.

"r think t he Colorado-Michigan series proves what we're going to miss with the alliance,· Carr said . "In two games, it's developed into what people love about college foot­ball. Both games went right down to the wire. Everywhere I went this summer, that's the game people wanted to talk about."

It was all set in motion Sept. 24, 1994, by "Rocket Jet,' quite possi­bly college football's play of. the decade.

"When you look at it from a pure The Buffalos trailed Michig~n college football experience, this is a 26-21 with six seconds remaining. great experience, to go into a stadi- As time expired, Stewart threw the um like this," Neuheisel said. "1b ball over 70 yards downfield in the play a major college football game direction of a quartet of Colorado • against the team that has the most receivers: Westbrook, Blake Ander­wins in Division I-A is something. son, Rae Carruth and James Kidd.

"We'll play iii frontofl05,OOO fans Anderson was supposed to at the stadium and a national tele- deflect the ball to one of the others. vision audience. If you are growing The improbable play rarely worked up thinking about playing college in practice. But this time it did. football, this is the kind of game you Anderson tipped the ball to West· picture yourself playing in." brook, who landed in the end zone

The had news is that no more ~ith 0:00 on the clock. games are scheduled between these So, how does Neuheisel PI'llpare two heavyweights . Some might for Saturday's game? think that ~arr, under pressure "I keep watching the catch,· he ~ successive four-loss seasons, .said. "Just to know that it is possi­IDlght welcome a lighter schedule. hie.'

OPEN ' AT llAM

Sports

Cyclones pi n Moses at tailb • Due to the injurl planning on giving tru

Brett Coom«/AssocialNl ~

Prairie View A&M's De'Andre Jones (45), Lynn Jack on (54), and Roy Moses (87) sing the school song following the Panthers' 10 s 10 Texas Southern Aug. 30_ school's glory days, couldn 't win without scholarship players in 1995 or with 15 of them in 1996.

Johnson knows he must besr the burden of the school's past, but that doesn't mean he likes it.

"I've talked to everybody else about the streak, but I don't talk to the players about th e st r eak. That's negative talk and I don't talk negative," he said.

Prairie View fans aren't being

C~CEY~

Friday Happr Hour.

negat ive this weekend. If any· t hing, they seem po itlve th ir team will win, 80 much 80 th t J ohnson said a selloul i expett d at Blackshear Stadium. . "Th ey feel it's Prairie Vi w',

time to win," he said. "1'h ttitud has really changed."

J ohnson joked that he'. had request for 80 many pre 8 p that reporler, could take up a whole section themselv .

~POHTS

(' A F Ie: -212 IS. ClINlON STREET ' 'OWA CITY. IOWA. ;"J~ . p,;

The Best SUNDAY BR 9:30 .. 1:

Join u.s for a festive Brunch buffN fc wum • Belgian Waffles · urdou Fr h h Tc

• PastrieS • Bountiful array of nal All this for only $4.99! Or tty

$7.99, which includ unlimited

Schedule of Activities:

• Rules Clinic for Flag Football/5

u k

Finger Food

Frenzy 5-7 p.m.

• Practice Times for Flag Football T (schedule through Recreational Services 33 92 3

Drink Specials

it-7p.m. $1.50 Pints

52.25 BOttles 52.25

wenDrlnks

• Coed & Women's Flag Football Tournaments 16pm

• Sport Clubs Practice 15pm-Spm (Soccer, M & W Rugby, Lacrosse, M & W Ultim te Frisbee etc. Information on other sports club available)

Directions: West on Melrose I Right on Mormon Trek I Left at Stoplight on Hawkeye Park Road.

Take Hawkeye Interdorm Cambu (runs every half hour)

DIVISION OF RECREA OONAL SERVICES

335·9293

--

~edhes

unl (8)/ i hown In thl uncWed Ale photo. ~ havt' noticed th tiny..tdtf hurt with

worn by Ih Owl' foo6ll

mple plays _ hrough the tears

.,lurt peraon-

T Ltl I SA tnt. S •• LT •

22 S. Clinton

v ry Mon ...

3.50 Pitch 1.25 Plnte

• $2.00 Import MIlle • 2 for 1', All IJNllla'

1.75 Import 1.75 80ttl

I !

The D~ily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Friday, September 12, 1997 - 5 B

Sports

Pressure builds for Cats' Barnett • Northwestern's new stadium is yet another sign of Gary Barnett's success with the Wildcats, but with it comes added pressure 'for more Big Ten titles.

By Brian Bergstein Associated Press

'EVANSTON, Ill. - Two Big Ten championship trophies gleam in the lobby, but perhaps the most tangible product of Gary Barnett's tenure at Northwestern stares back at him every time he looks out his office windows.

Construction crews spent the summer transforming the school's 70·year·old football stadium from a rotting relic into a more modern arena with a plush luxury box, a new locker room and grass field.

No longer is it called Dyche Sta­dium, which sat creaking and unloved while the Wildcats were one of the worst teams in sports. It is now Ryan Field, named in honor of the insurance company executive who bankrolled part of the $20 mil­lion-plus redevelopment.

But the stadium might someday, if only informally, be known as the House That Barnett Built.

Even before he led the tradition­ally pathetic Wildcats to two straight Big Ten titles, Barnett prodded administrators at the uni­versity - by far the smallest in its conference - to show it considered athletic success a priority.

Although the private school began planning the stadium improvements before the Wildcats reversed their sagging football for­tunes in 1995, the renovation indi­cates Northwestern expects more seasons resembling the last two.

"You can't get complacent, you can't look back," athletic director Rick Taylor said. "You've got to con­tinue to improve ... That's one of the reasons we made the investment in the new stadium."

The renovations will make their debut Saturday, when Northwest­ern (l-l) plays Duke (0-1).

If Barnett, 51, is feeling more pres­sure now that he's raised everyone's expectations, he isn't letting on.

The youthful, laid-back coach

realizes the renovated stadium out­side his window symbolizes the reconstruction he performed on the Wildcats, but he doesn't dwell on the subject.

"If you spend any time thinking about that, you're going to cheat your responsibilities," Barnett said. "In football, you learn to operate that the only thing that's important is the very next play that you're going to do, and so you carry that over into every facet of your life."

Even so, other coaches can attest to how their jobs got somewhat harder after turning perennial losers into champions.

"When I first arrived, the fans just said, 'We don't want to be embarrassed,'" said Wisconsin coach Barry Alvarez, who took the Badgers from a 1-10 season in 1990 to the 1993 Big Ten championship. "My athletic director said, 'Man, if you won six games they'd think you hung the moon.' "After you win the Rose Bowl, they think you're going to go every year ..

Crimson Tide shut out Vanderbilt By Teresea M. Walker

Associated Press

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - A new coach for Vanderbilt, same old reault for Alabama.

The 15th-ranked Crimson Tide beat Vanderbilt 20-0 Thursday night, extending its winning streak to 13 straight at the expense of Woody Widen hofer, the Com­modores' third coach this decade. Alabama i8 36-2 against Vandy since 1960.

Alabama (2-0) ruined Widen­hofer's chance of becoming just the second Vandy coach since World War II to win his first two games

Sanctuatr, ~." HI',t.1U[ ant ,\ Pub

,105 S. Gilbert ,/ Court 351 569~ Open g 4pm

despite an offense that gained only 120 yards through three quarters.

Warren Foust blocked Joe Webb's punt in the first quarter and Steve Hanis recovered at the 22. That set up Freddie Kitchens' 17-yard touch­down pass to Ed Scissum with 53.6 seconds left in the first quarter, all the points the Crimson Tide would need.

Vanderbilt (I-I) stayed close with a defense that allowed Alabama 94 yards through the first two quar­ters and only 26 in the third quar­ter, intercepting two passes off Kitchens.

The Commodores were 'hurt repeatedly by penalties and dropped passes as Alabama got its

first shutout in the series since a 41-0 victory at Tuscaloosa in 1980. Vandy got across midfield four times but wound up going back­ward and settling for punts.

The Crimson Tide had its longest drive of the night in the fourth quarter when Kitchens hit Quincy Jackson with a 45-yard pass to the Vandy 14, nearly doubling his pass­ing yardage. Shaun Alexander capped the 97-yard drive with a 1-yard run with 8:30 left and Alaba­ma led 17-0.

Kitchens was 9-of-17 for 106 yards. Brian Cunningham also kicked field goals of 48 and 45 yards for Alabama.

HUNCiRY HOBO "SERVING IOWA CITY'S PARrY NEEDS SINCE 1980"

2 Foot "Caboose" (Serves 10-12) $20.95 4 Foot "Side Car" (Serves 20-24) $38.95 ~ij.1~~ 6 Foot "Box Car" (Serves 30-40) $55.95

Sun. - Thu~. 10:30 - 10:00 Fri. - Sat. 10:30 - 11:00

I3lJlliJd i. DOUBLE FEATURE l "'::;%1 J EVE AT 7:OQ; SAT &SUN MATS 2:00

uA HIT!'!uJ::: -PLUS­

~fSH"'S @I GEORGE. H~R<ULES JUNGii~

WE AT 7:00' 9:15

SAT I SUN MATS.

1:30' 4:00

WEAT 7:OQ" g:40

SAT' SUN MATS.

1:00&3:45

WEAT ' :46' g:46

SAT' 'UN MATS. 11:45' 3:46

RRE DOWN BELOW

-R-

EVEAT 6:45' 9:30 SAT'SUN

IIfATS 1:00' 3:45

featuring: • Humidor, Cigar,

& Martini menu • 24 Specialty Beers on T,

• Single Malt Scotches & Bourbons " .,

• Cognacs I • Dessert Wines • Beer Patio Open! • Live Jazz & Blues

every Thurs., Fri, & Sat.

127 E. St.

American Heart A Association.. Y

$anctumr; -:. Reslaurant & Pub

Sanctuatr, : 1;' ReSliluran! & Pub

405 S. Gilbert @ Court :., ", ,. ·351-5692 ',. . '.:q

\.~ ·;-~·.~:.Open @ 4pm~~.· .:.

CONSPIRACY THEORY

~M£lGlBSON .. JUliA @

I ROBERTS

. ,"

,.. ... .

68 -The Daily Iowan - Iowa Oty. Iowa - Friday. September 12. 1997

Baseball

So many homers, so little time

Mn Heisenfettl Associated Press

Seattle's Ken Griffey, Jr. follows through on his career-high 50th home run against Minnesota on Sept. 7.

BASEBALL RoUNDUP

• Ken Criffey Jr. and Mark McCwire, both sitting with 50 homers, are chasing Roger Maris' record.

By Ben Walker Associated Press

Watch Mark McGwire at the plate and witness brute force. A big guy with a grunt and grimace, he is Mr. Muscles.

See Ken Griffey Jr. and savor the sweetest swing in baseball. Dia­mond studs in both ears, he is Mr. Smooth.

Two completely different pack­ages - by power hitting standards, that is - but the same result.

Both at 50 home runs, both with 2Y, weeks left. in the chase for Roger Maris' record of61 in 1961.

"Let's just savor the moment now," McGwire said after hitting No. 50 on Wednesday. "And if it happens, it happens.

"But there's only been a dozen guys get to 50," he said. "It's tough enough to hit 50 without thinking about getting to 61. ~

Maybe, but that's what most

Dave Hammond/Associated Press

New York Yankees first baseman Tino Martinez dives to catch a grounder hit by Baltimore's Brady Anderson Thursday.

Yankees 14, Orioles 2 BALTIMORE - Derek Jeter

and Paul O'Neill had three RBIs apiece in a nine-run sixth inning as the New York Yankees handed the Baltimore Orioles their most lopsided loss of the season.

The victory cut the Orioles' lead over New York in the AL East to 7 112 games and kept Baltimore's magic number to clinch the divi­sion title at 12.

New York was 0-7 against Balti­more this season before winning at home 10-3 Sunday. For an encore, the Yankees hammered the Orioles in a game that was reminiscent of last season, when New York won 10 of 13 against Baltimore.

Jeter had a three-run double and O'Neill hit a three-run homer in the sixth, the Yankees' biggest inning of the year. New York got six hits and four walks off three Baltimore pitchers.

Andy Pettitte (17-7) allowed one unearned run and five hits in sev-en innings.

White Sox 7, Indians 5 CHICAGO - Robin Ventura

hit a tiebreaking, two-run single in the seventh inning as the Chicago White Sox beat the Cleve-

" land Indians. The Indians, who swept three

from the White Sox last weekend in Cleveland, still lead second­place Milwaukee by 5 112 games in the AL Central. Chicago trails Cleveland by 6 112 but is nine games back in the I08S column.

Witb one out in the seventh, Frank Thomas walked and Albert Belle - hitless in his previous 13 at-bflts against his former team -lined a double that finished Charles Nagy (14-10).

Alvin Morman relieved Nagy, and Ventura hit his first pitch for a two-run single to put the Sox ahead 6-4. After an intentional walk to Mike Cameron, Jorge Fab­regas foUowed with a run-scoring single.

Jim Thome hit his 38th homer off Keith Foulke (2-0) in the eighth to make it 7-5.

Rangers 7, Twins 0 ARLINGTON, Texas - Ivan

Rodriguez homered three times in a game for the first time in his career and Roger Pavlik pitched six shutout innings as Texas end­ed a five-game losing streak.

Rodriguez had two-run homers in the third and sixth and added a solo shot in the eighth for his 19th ofthe season. His five RBIs tied a career high set in 1993.

Pavlik (3-4) won for the first time since April 24 in his second start si nee missing almos t four months following right elbow surgery. Elbow soreness knocked him out of the Rangers' rotation following a start on May 6, and Pavlik did not return to the active roster until Sept. 2.

Pavlik gave up only two hits -singles by Ron Coomer and Chuck Knoblauch. He struck out two and walked three.

. Athletics 8, Blu8 Jays 7 OAKLAND, Calif. - Rookie

Ben Grieve singled home the win­ning run with one out in the bot­tom of ninth inning, giving the Oakland Athletics a victory over the Toronto Blue Jays on Thurs­day.

Grieve's infield hit capped a two-run rally against reliever Kelvim Escobar (2-1).

With one out, Miguel Tejada reached on third baseman Tom Evans' error. Jason McDonald fol­lowed with a single that sent Teja­da to third, and McDonald took second on the throw.

A passed hall by Benito Santia­go made it 7-all, and Dave Maga­dan walked. Grieve then hit a roller toward third base that scored McDonald.

Grieve is 14-for-40 (.350) since the A's promoted him 'to the majors. T.J . Mathews (6-2) pitched a scoreless ninth for the win.

Giants 5, Phillies 3 PHILADELPHIA - Jeff Kent's

two-run homer in the ninth inning gave San Francisco a victory over Philadelphia, moving the Giants into a first-place tie in the NL West.

The Giants are tied with the Los Angeles Dodgers with '16 games left . The Dodgers didn 't play Thursday.

After Barry Bonds singled to open the ninth, Kent hit his 27th homer of the season off Jerry Spradlin (3-7). The win went to Roberto Hernandez (3-1), who got one out in the eighth. Rod Beck pitched the ninth for his 36th save.

The Giants have won five of their last six and 10 of 16. Kent's homer broke the team record for home runs in a season by a second baseman, topping the mark set by Rogers Hornsby in 1927.

Trailing 3-0 after six innings, the Giants scored one in the sev­enth and two in the eighth to tie the game.

Mets 9, Expos 5 NEW YORK - John Olerud hit

for the cycle and drove in five runs as the New York Mets beat the Montreal Expos.

Olerud hit an RBI double in the first, a single in the third, a solo homer in the seventh and a bases­loaded triple in the eighth.

Olerud is the seventh Met to hit for the cycle, and the first to do it at Shea Stadium since Tommie Agee on July 6, 1970. Alex Ochoa hit for the cycle at Philadelphia on July 3, 1996. . Edgardo Alfonzo had three hits and three RBIs for New York, which moved to within 5 112 games of idle Florida in the NL wild -card race.

Rick Reed (12-8), who loet four of his previous five decisions, tied his career high with nine strike­outs and walked only one in 7 1-3 innings. He allowed four runs and eight hits before leaving with one out and a 6-2 lead in the eighth.

_SANDBERG/Few days left at Wrigley ContinW!d from Page IB

tQ do - get in the World Series.~ Sandberg, who batted .385 in

Cubs' playoff trips in 1984 and 1989, laments it, as well. When he's fin­ished Sept. 28, he will have played on just three winning teame with the Cubs since joining them in 1982.

'That's really the only thing [ feel I missed. I had fun playing this game, I've enjoyed just about every­thing I could possibly enjoy except for not being in the World Series," he said. .

"[ regret that, not only for myself, but for the fans who come out here every day. And just not having a World Series hete at Wrigley Field, that's kind of a shame." - . Even during the years of losing,

• · · • •

Sandberg never changed his approach to the game. He came early and prepared to play.

"He never missed a day of work," first baseman Mark Grace said. "He never missed a day of ground balls, of batting practice, even when he was fatigued or if it was hot or whatever.~

"He hit more home runs than any second baseman in the game, and he didn't stand there and admire them and watch them, and he doesn't show up an opponent," Grace added.

"It was his profesaionalism," Dunston said. "There are not many professionals in the game anymore, who play the game like it's sup­posed to be played. You don't show up anybody; you're not waving at

cameras after you hit a home run." In the clubhouse, the otherwise

low-key Sandberg is a notorious prankster. Hot foots were one oi'his specialties, says fonner teammate Rick Sutcliffe.

"He had this 'one butane thi'llg that would send a pluine of flames of about two feet 80 he could get you from long di.tance, W Sut'.cliffe said.

When rookie third baseman Kevin Orie went on an injury ,rehabilita­tion assignment thia year, he opened up his travelina bag to find it brim­ming with every lOuvenir imagin­able, like coffee mugs and key chains. CoIJlPlimenti of.Sandberg:

"He alway •. throws a pleasant Burprise in my locker every other day, 10 it keeJll on your toea; laid Orie.

everyone else is talking about . Because when it comes to riveting races, there's only one big one in baseball, and it's not whether Hous­ton can hold off Pittsburgh in the NL Central or if Milwaukee can catch Cleveland in the AL Central.

For McGwire to match Mari s, he'l need 11 home runs in hiB last 17 games for the St. Louis Cardi­nals. Sounds like a lot, but remem­ber this - in his last 15 games, McGwire has hit 11.

Griffey had 16 games left., going into Thursday night's game for Seattle.

Meanwhile, if McGwire pa8Bes Maris, will fans mark it with an asterisk? McGwire got the chance to play 165 games this year because of his July 31 trade from Oakland to St. Louis.

Either way, McGwire is the fi rst player to hit 50 home runs while playing for two teams in a season. With 34 homers for the Ns and 16 (in only 81 at-bats) for the Cardi­nals, he also could become the first player to lead one team in homers and rank second on another club in the same year.

60 Ramsey 6and C.D. Release Party

with special guest

Dave Zollo SATURDAY

Club Swank Cocktail Lounge Music

MONDAY

Baboon FREE Showl

Catchall

The Daily

the excitement of Hawkeye Football with Pregame-a special supplement in today's Daily Iowall.

IOWA vs.

TULSA The Daily Iowan

-

IOWA CITY',", ,\1()RNIN(; l\J1\\,\PI\I'/ R

To ReselVe Advertising pac in PfLWI1' •

-

,

1

--Sports

The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Friday, September 12, 1997 - 78

Classifieds 111 Communications Center . , 335-5784

CLASSIFIED READERS: When answering any ad that requires cash, please check them out before responding. DO NOT SEND CASH, CHECK OR MONEY ORDER until you know what you will receive in return. It Is impossible for us to ad that cash.

PERSONAL PERSONAL

FREE Pregnanc,y Testing Mon. - Sat. 10-1 & Thurs 10-1 , 5-8

IIMMA GO! 11M ... CLINIC 2Z7 ... u.. ...... tow. CIty

319/337·2111 "Iowa's Clinic of Choice since 1973"

WAANNG; SQ.4E PRE<lNNCYTESlNl gresNENmOIOCE. FOR NOf\hJUOOMENT~CAAE BE SURE TO ASK ARST.

Doties: include typing ments using word

processor/typewriter, filing, collating, copying, dislribu-

fighting self. Camacho was able to load up against Leonard, while movemen t will be important against De La Hoya.

he said, "His speed has decreased and t h at's good for me. Macho Camacho is not as difficult as Whitaker. I think be's slower tban

lion of offICe documents, receptionist and other duties OS ossigned. Qualifications: General office skills, word processi ng, and ability to

wonc well os a learn member.

"fve got my quickne sand sharp­neBS bac k, " said Camacho, who weighed 158 pounds agains t Leonard, but who will be lighting within the 147-pound welterweight limit Saturday night. In his last six tights, Camacho has weighed from 152 to 160 pounds. He last weighed 147 pounds when he fought a tech­nical draw against Sal Lopez Jan. 16,1996.

Camacho appears to be in splen­did shape.

De La Hoya acknowledges that Camacho's left·handed style can make him a difficult opponent, but

he used to be." The fight, bosted by Caesa rs

Palace but to be held in the Thomas & Mack Center, is tbe featured bout on a pay-per-view card. In another 12-rounder, Raul Marquez of Hous­ton defends the IBF middleweight title against Keith Mullings of Brooklyn, N.Y., subbing for injured Yory Boy Campos of Mexico.

Friday night at Caesars Palace, Steve Johnston of Denver defends the WBC lightweight title against Sal Duran of Mexico. Appearing in a six-round welterweight bout will

=i'iii"'=-J WORK-STUDY po.1:1on In oonolles lab. Science major pralemld. Tlss.,. e.perienee • plus. Call Oana al 336-

----=:::::=c==='--- 7571. ....... ----,11 WORK STUDY ADMINISTRATIVE

ASSISTANT City of Iowa City $6/hr.; up to 20/hrs/wk,

flexible between Bam-5pm. WiU assist the

18-year-old Hector Camacho Jr. I~~~ ....... ~ __ _

Volunteer Specialist with admin. taslcs including assisting with volunteer recruitment, training/

between 8-5 Apply in poen;on to Office Slalewide Clinical Education

n",,'co" ... 280 Med Labs

ice schedule tops list of Indy changes scheduling, writing press releases and articles, and other related duties. Must be independent and self motivated. Good writing

skills and computer knowledge a must.

Van Meter Industrial, Iowa's leading whole­electrical distributor a full-time ware­engine used by the rival race

groups still presents an ob tade. George said he didn't think the

chBnge in practice and qualifying alone would attract car owners of the other erie .

The cbanges are intended to recapture intensity at the race, he aid. "l don't think it's that the event

itself haa been diminished ... it's jugt the chang-

----------- ing times," George said.

" [f you could plot a trend, I think you would ee that the crowds, for whatever rea-

Tony G.org. son, were Indianapolis Motor Speedway president beginning to _____ -:-_____ " drop off even

when the C.4RT teams were here.~ he ssid.

. -It kind of went up and down, but id the even when they were here in the

early '90., and up until '95 , the trend hlld started goiD( down.

101 attribute that 8S much to com­petition for people's time and man­y anything.

Many businesses reported decrea sed revenue during May ~~~~~~iiYil<:al1 because of the CART-IRL split, but the race has remained sold out with crowds estimated at more than 1..-------, 300,000. The speedway doesn't dis­close attendance.

CART spokesman Ron Richards wouldn't comment specifically on the speedway move.

BIRTHRIGHT offers

Free Pregna.ncy

and Support No appointment nt«SSllry

\1"11 11 10,1m - 1:10pm

r", I\' 6:10-X:10pm

rhuf' I< I ri 1 - 'pm

CALL 338-8665

"When you look at the situation philosophically where IRL went and where CART is, there are still several i sues about the state of our I sport," Richards said. "Certainly some of those dealt with the speed­way, but there were other consider­ations, and still are, that have to be ~~~olved before we could get togeth- I ~A;;;;;D~O~P~T~IO~N~;;;=-':'

An official with a prominent 1~C;;ii5i~I~oi§8PiIN)OA;;:D;:-OP=-_ CART team, who spoke on condi- 1-80(l-844-3630 & w"11 send

tion he not be identified, called it an who are ,~~;x;,:t:~~r~~ "interesting development, certainly" laIop\. The tI10Ices are all your •. Our

HrVIcd 1ft fr .. & conl\det1llal. but I think they still haven't addressed the rules issue .... At the PEOPLE MEETING end of the day, you still need a dif-' PEOPLE fer~nt car ~nd engine package" at START DATING TOHIGIfTil Indianapolis. I Play the lowe daHng (jIIIle.

"""-: . d 1i ' I th t' I 1-800-ROMANCE .xU2tO • w8 18 e mte y a move a IS

good for the competitors that are ,LOST & FOUND running there," he said. FOUND: bracolot. com. 01 Washlno­Ims- Johnson. Call 10 Identify. 46&-

lI,lWKEYE fJO«l'S Roo DUPfA----@ _____ ---, I~~~~dogwlthplnk lOST CAT! Gray short ha~ r..".la w;lh purpla COllar. In the vicinity or N.Oovtmor S.- on Sepl_ 3. _ cel351-6531 .

field Hockey 1l1li WIlt: Two weeks after the

s lasl game, the Iowa held hockey w1ll head out east to Philadelphia,

1'1InIl , thIS end 10 take part in the Temple tov: lona!. Coach Beth Beglin's team will lace. big lest agaInst the two-lime defendIng tha/Tr,)ion North Carolina Tarheels at 11 B m,

urday 10 wlillhen lake on ellhet De • 01 T~letht next day _ilia: Iowa lorward Kerry

.... 1ItteI: Coming off a Ihree game winning slreak, the Hawl\eyes look to add more victories to theIr preseason record. With starting setter Barb Zvonek nursing Inluries, Shannon Smith will most likely see considerable playing lime at that pbsition. Senior standout Jennifer Bell will also be looked upon as a leader.

WORK·STUDY PROVIDE ctttlcal and lechnlcal sup­port lor prDloct ill S<*Ci EdYcaliOll 10 Improv. studtnllaa,nlno. 12-15 hours per _ , F~xlble lChtd""ng. S6I hour. Call VIA 33S-1168.

those aDDrov'~ for Work

Call Susan "Ol!''''V at 356-5224.

hoolse/ljrivler position their Iowa City

Illh, .... n,," We are looking '::~=::;::;;:;;:== enthUSiastic, hard HELP WANTED who likes working

The City Press-Citizen circulallon depan­ment is looking for a pan-time customer ser~ vice represenlalive to join our A.M. team. The posi­tion is 27.S hours per week. Previous- phone and data entry experience are preferred. Please call Deb Messenger for more details at 331-6038, X 208, for more dew Is or send a resume and cover letter to: Iowa City Press-Chizen ATIN: Deb Messenger

P,O, Box 1480 lowli City, IA 52244-2480

TARGET Would you like to

work in a fun team atmosphere? Flexible hours?' 10% discount? Many daytime (l9si­tions open at Target.

EOE. Apply in person at the service desk, Target,

Coralville.

General ,

UISTUDENTS Immediate/School Yr.

Posilions TELEPHONE RESEARCH

INTERVIEWERS 10-20 hrsIwk-Primarily EYe

& Weekends flexibte 10 sludent

schedutes S5.5Mu' to sIan

atmosphere. drivlnQ record a

Send resumes to: Meter'lndustrial, Inc. Operations Manager Highland Court City, IA 52240

Fin & Feather is corrently hiring for pan-lime and full-time ,ales po8ilions in the Iowa Cily Hunting Depanment. Must be able to work mornings and some weekends. Shooting sports and arcbery experi­ence is required for full­ti me sales pOSitions and is preferred for pan-time sales positions.

Apply ill persoll 10 Jeff, SCOII or Chris

Fin & Feather 943 S. Riverside Drive,

Iowa City, IA

~ Now hiring friend­ly customer orient­ed person to work

Lessard scored two of the Hawkeyes' four Is lR Itlell .-0 blanking 01 MIamI of Ohio

OII(Joor y IOwa owns a l-g record against NOItI\ Carolina. WllIl the lone wm coming at the 1992 Temple InVitational. Iowa's 5-0 openlno day toss to Bali State ViaS the team's

Cuell, CoaI_.lts: ' 1Ihink this is a reallmpo~ant weekend: co-head coach Matt Sonnichsen said. "If we can put together a successful weekend, go 4-0 or 3-1 , we can use this to build lowards the Big Ten, because it's a very competilive weekend. We're playing some traditionally good volleyball teams. I think it Vlill give us a lot of confidence In our abilities. I look for this to be a really good experience for us·

;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;====;1 On Campus; Paid Training Must Speak fluenl English;

days, Apply to manager only.

112 E. Washington 354-1200 008

lnet 1987 Coach Beglin has a '63·~l (814) I ecoId allowa

CualI'u . 1lI: 'II llhat '1., ny, r lIy locused: Iowa coach lin to "We r lIy wanted the two weekS

a to 01 pr~~lInO for lhe tournament. 101 US thai • bonus I think the team Is ICiidy. ¥J(\ ·r.lnlendmg 10 come 10 play. I

10 . hem be hungry thiS weekend rtll Carolina has a tetnfic team, but thev

slllllla to beat us on the held - reputahon lone n'l do II. Certainly we're the under·

dog ~ our player are looking forward to the uRily to cr 'em'

lid WIIk: Iowa will hOst the , Hawt< lovlijtlooal September 20-21 at

GI FitId I \¥ill ta on PilClllc In the fw round and then play either K.enl State or SOu MI DOfl~.

- by Tony Wlrt

Vollnan "'" ..... : The young Hawkeye volley­II ""I travellOf the Ilr lime this sea·

~ lifepal' to face tough competition d~ Iowa State Toulnamentln

I Will OIllhe UnlverSl\y of New ~I today 111 pm and C«ltral MIchigan

It 6 p m saturday Iowa will challenge Rul­gill at. pm , d finish I ~ again t 10

..

.. It Wtek: The Hawkeyes will return to Carver-Hawkeye Arena Tuesday night to face Bradley at7 p.m. Next weekend Iowa will Iravello Tennessee to participate in the Uni­versity 01 Tennessee Classic.

- by Megan Manful!

Women's Golf TIIII WIllI: The Iowa women's golf leam

travels 10 Easl Lansing, Mich ., for the Spartan Invitational, Saturday and Sunday.

MIlt IIOtII: Sixteen teams are compet­Ing,lncludlng Big Ten teams Michigan Slale, Michlgan, lndiana and Iowa The 54·hole tournament formal Is set up with 36 holes to be played on Saturday, beginning alB am., and the linatlalo begin at a a.m., Sunday. Iowa's line-up consists of sophomores M.C. Mullen, Stacey Bergman and Keli l Carney, along with lunlor Aimee Maurer and freshmen Katherine Mowat and Meghan Spero.

CIHII'ICII •• 1ItI: 'We've played this particular course a lot, with lhe Big Ten and the lady Northern being played there.' coach DIane Thomason said. 1he four (upperclass· men) Vttio've been there know the course, so I feel good. I'm anxious to see where we are and where we need to start working:

- by Arldy Hamilton

Part-Time Office HelD

Heartland Express has 1'Iexi­ble pan-time oppol1unilit for Individuals with office

experience. General clerical positions to include dalll entry, copying, fi ling and

sorting are available (0 ind i­viduals at S7 .OOIhour, work­jnS flexible hours between

1am - 6pm Monday - Friday.

If Intcresled, applications arc bei ng laken at:

Heartland Express 2777 Heanland Drive

III .. y 965. 112 mil< north orl·80) or phone t -800-654-11 15

Now hiring delivery drivers.

Earn BIG,

BIG BUCKS! • hourly wages • commission • tips • uniforms provided

• food discount Please pick up an appli­

cation at 1911 Broadway

Pepperwood M all.

type 30WPM Contacl Usa Werner@

, 341-9081

l'he Daily Iowan Carriers' Routes

The Circulation Department of The Dally Iowan hae openIng. for carrlers'routes In the Iowa City and Coralville ar •••. Benaflt. of a Dally Iowan route: • Monday through Friday delivery (Weekends freel)

• No collections • Carrier contests • Unlvenllty breaks • Delivery deadlln. - 7 am

Routes Available • N. Clinton, N. Dubuque, Fairchild • S. Van Buren, Bow.ry • Burlington, Colleg', Dodge, Governor, Luc.

Pl ..... pply In Room 111 of th. Communications Center

Clrcul.tlon Offlc. (319) 335-5783

The Dally Iowan low. City" Morning "w'P'pt,

s . h

88 -The Daily Iowan - Iowa City, Iowa - Friday, September 12, 1997

HELP WANTED ;;';';;'~";';;';'~"";;';;'--I

DISTRIBUTION WORKER The distribution department Is looking for depend­

individuals who are interested in part-time I elllployme!nt to work on an insertion machine. We

shifts during the mornings in addition I to Friday nights.

.. --- ~ -----

The Daily Iowan Assistant to the

Business Manager Th. DIlly Iowln Ie liking Ippllcetlona for

In Auilllnt 10 the Buslntu Menager. Dutlllinciude, but .re not Ilmlttel to:

oNR,NP o Rtconclliltlon of CIIh regl.t.r • coIlIctIon of PItt dUllCcount. • Itttndlnce It monthly boIrd m"tlng' o generel clerical dutlel

Houreere Mondly through Frldly, noon to 5 p.m. To Ipply, bring rIIume to Debbie or Bill In Room 111 01 the Communication. Center

The Dally Iowan Room 111C CommunlcatIona Center

If so, VOLUNTEERS, 8 of 18 over, are Invited 10 partlclpat

ASTHMA STUDY al th Univ

Oral-B Laboratories, a GilleUC Company, is seeking undergraduate students (preferably sophomore or junior year) to worle pan-time in the following disciplines. Computer OpmItIoas: Perform computer operations, hardware maintenance and PC related support functions to meet departmental objectives of the' Information Technology Department. Will do regular day-end and monthly balch processing in accordance with established procedures and practices. Diagnose, troubleshoot and

Qualified candidates should have F. hand coordi- I.--------i nation, be able to stand for long penods of time and be able to lift up to 20 Ibs. Interested persons should

Iowa Hospitals and Clinics to I t inhaler. COMPENSATION

AVAILABLE. Please call 335-7555 or 356· 7883 between the hou of 9:00 m and 4:00 pm Monday through Fri y or

more Inform lion.

common PC related problems with both hard'ware and software applications. Create and maintain any required d<x;umentation to support the regular computer operations schedule. The hours of this position will be part-time (approximately 10 to 15 hours per week). and will be between 5:00 and 9:00 AM. HumID Resoums: Perform a variety of Human Resource actWities for plant and office personnel support. including recruitment, pay and benefits administration. Affirmative Action Plan. health and safety and other related areas. W.ilI include word processing/clerical support functions. Desire applicants to be knowledgeable in Microsoft Word. Excel spreadsheets. and PowcrPoint software. Part-time \approximately 15 to 20 hours per week), between 8:00 AM and 5:00 PM. IndUJtrlal Enpneering: Perform activities related to Industrial Engineering functions in the manufacturing operation including worle sampling. data analysis and documentationlrecordkeepi ng. Microsoft Word. CAD and Excel spreadsheet software experience very helpful. Mtdlankal Engineering: Perform testing and statistical analysis of pre-production machinery as well as other related engineering duties. May also worle with manufacturing operation. Desire applicants with good workin~ knowledge of Microsoft Word. CAD software. Excel spreadsheets. Part-lime (10 to 20 hours per wek) flexible schedule. We offer very competitive pay and a positive work environment. These part-time positions have a potential to becoming fu lilime in the summer months. Interested candidates please send a cover letter and resume 10:

Becky Hasler ORAL-B LABORATORIES

Iowa City Plant 1832 Lower Muscatine Road

P.O. Box 4502, Iowa City, Iowa 52240

contact: Loren Parsons, Distribution Manager Iowa City

Press-Citizen p.o. Box 2480

1725 N. Dodge Street Iowa City, IA 52244-2480

An EquIl 0pp0rtwU1)' EmpIoy<r

lilt """"'" oad .ppoocIIlt tilt _b cl diwnily in tilt _ pIIct. dIIo boIio/ or _. _ bockpouod

WAL*MARTt Positions Available.

$5.50 starting; $5.75 cashiering; $6.50 overnight.

Offering flexible hours and temporary positions. Apply at courtesy desk.

.WAL*MART-IoJ:WAYS LCIW PRICE5.IoJ:WAYS WAL-MART.

~:

Great Benefits Available for Full and Part Tiine Employees • Medical and Dentallnsu'rance • Free Health Club Membership • 401 K Savings Plan • Free Long Distance Calls • Stock Ownership • Birthday Bonuses • Monthly Profit Sharing • Employee Referral Bonuses • Two Weeks Paid Vacation • Holiday Pay and Sick Pay

North Liberty Cente, One Quail Creek Circle North Liberty, IA

319-626-8900

North Liberty

TilE D/\/l Y IO~VAN CLASSIFIED AD BLANK Write ad using one word per blank. Minimum ad is 10 words.

1 ___ ~_2 3 4 ____ _ 5 6 7 8 ------9 10 11 12 -------13 14 15 16 -------17 18 19 20 ____ _

21 22 23 24 -------Name ___ ~ ___ ~_~_~~_~~~~_~~ __ Address ______ .:...-,....-________ ~ __ _ ____ -'-____ :--_______ Zip _--:-__ _

Ad information: /I of Days _ Category __________ _ Cost: (/I words) X ($ per word) Cost covers entire time period.

,.] days 90¢ per word ($9.00 min.) 11·15 days $1 .79 per word ($17.90 min.) 4-5 days 98¢ per word ($9.80 min.) 16·20 days $2.29 per word ($22.29 min.) 6-10 dlYS $1.28 per word ($12.8.0 min.) 30 daY' $2 .66 per word ($26.60 min.)

REFUNDS. DEADLINE IS 11AM PREVIOUS WORKING DAY. ' Send completed ad blank with check or money order, place ad over the Jlhone, or stop by our office located at: 111 Communications Center, Iowa City, 52242 .

Phone Office Hours 335-5784 or 335-5785 . Monday·Thursday

fax 335-6297 Friday 8-5 8-4

=-=

ICT Need extra cash?

ThInk about k'fllporary Jobs with ACTI

• Eam S6.2S-S7/hour. FT /PT da},>, short evening shifts.

• Data entry, (orms processing, in-coming customer service telephone work in modem Iowa City offICes. Other jobs with special needs, such as graphic arts or foreiW' ranguage skills.

• Some JObs start in September otllers begin later. W,rk continues (or several da},>, weeks, or months.

Apply. now in-person to be on call list' for available

jobs: Human Resources

Department ACT National Office

2201 North Dodge Street Iowa City, Iowa ACT is III Equal

0pp0Iumity Employer For infonnatioo about CII"OCf

ernplil)'lll<ml opportuniliel wilb our websile

BeslWestem Westfield Inn is currently accepting applications for the following position: • A.M. waitstaff .

M-FIOam-2pm

Benefits include free uniforms, paid vacations and flexible scheduling.

Excellent income potential for part-time employmetlt.

Apply in person to the front desk.

and 965, Exill4O.

Aleyou~ EnIIuIaIIIc. DIdC<iId?

Hy-Yee may be lIle pIooe lor you. We a e ClJrI9ntly seeldng to nil the loIolIMg

pert-line posIlions mnedbtely.

IDIpa",*,,~."" Specl<iIy Meot/Seafood bery - Ealy Mornings &. Nlghn Avoi. italon ExPf9$$

• Hy-Yee's Kitchen . Floral- UpeIIenced Deslgnen Needed Grocery -CIeliaICheck9!S -Doyline. Nights &. WeeI<ends liquor Dept. Delivery Person for Rora &. Grocery~ Mon.-SoI.

Apply In person at: 1720 Waterfront Dr..

Iowa CIty Contact Michelle

at 354-7601

Hawkeye Food System Inc. is seeking a full-time

Accounts Payable Inventory Oerk. Job

dUlies include: process invenlory invoice for payment, verify costs, maintain and reconcile

vendor ICcounlS. Qualifications include:

g09d oral &: wrillen communlcltlon sleills,

ability to operate a calculator. computer experience preferred.

Accountinl education &: ex perience preferred. Qualified candidates

should send resume. or IJlPI y within, by 9/17197 to:

Hawkeye Food S'ystems Inc. M~u. HumsnR~~

P.O. 801 1820 lowl Cily. IA m4-4 mo Second Street

(Hwy6 Wetl or ConI. Ute)

EOIl "'IF MP ON, .... d ..

---

HOME TYPISTS II~========:.=:::; PC users needed. $45,000 income

potential. Call 1-800-513-4343

Ext. 8-9612.

RESIDBITIAL.

PROCESSOR Pan-time position In the

Item Processin, Deplltment I t our downtown Iocalion.

RespOnsible foralle proce -ing of checks and bank

ilems includi". Cllcodina. sorting. balanclna. micro­filmin, and preparina out loin, cash ICllen. Position requ,res I(}'key. basic typ­ina and baJaneina Wdl.

STAFF

We o StaronJWaae56 00 SO/llr. o J.laibIe ICbcduIca o M~ Iocaoon m or DeJr

accllrlCy. 8ltention 10 delli I and the ability 10 mc.:I deadlines. Prior bank Of

processin, ~pericnoe help­ful. The schedu Ie is Monday Ihrouah Friday 2:30 or 330 p.m. - 7:30 p.rn. (or Iller u nee&d) with n~ible hoUl$

• ProCesionaI .. (CU'IIMLt DOC 0IXaI:II')' ~

• Ouaandana bcndit plCAIt,hbilllR

on allernllina weekends To Ippl~. ~mplete an

IppliC8llon .:

FIRST \. •• I I " 11 . 1 I 1', .1 Ill.

Human Resources Department

204 s: W: hinatoo. 10"'. City. IA 52240

Th Sta t

health cknW iN' IUIIlIICt

Earn over s300 a month and IR\'C I

Ie [han 2 hour of time a day delivering the Pre s-Cttizen!

, , What a great way 10

gel extra spending moll try! , ,

Colli Garb K onrc1 rd,. Hom[ Dc-hw.-ry .... In"g .. ' ., C .. .., \(tunAII ..... t.·u .a.t ...... _

at 337·6038

From The Mountains

Columbia

* RICHLAND MEMORIAL DO PITAL location offers all the excl m n or a m metropolitan area - located mldway betwee mountain sid resorts and th d of South Carolina's Grand tr8l1d. A ""'\.L.rwv1

community teaching hospital th a I l Trauma Center, Renal Transplant Program and Bone Marrow Tran plant nt r, seeking experl nc d RN f r Critical Care and M dI uri areas. INTERVIEW expe and RELOCATION allow· ance available for quali· fied applicants. For more lnfonnation con· tact our RECRUITMENT OFFICE, 1-800-321-6662 or 803·434·6970. FAX: 803-434·7023. EOE.

South arolino Is ThePlac

Richland Memorial Hospital

I'

ita!

MAIDA <'wh,et drlvo, FOR RENT ~6, low paef<:r.' ho\ch, c",I ... , A/C, 1:...;:;.::..:.;.::.;,:;,.;.,.---­CIslllta. EIIC .,,1 conchtlon , S89OO. :IIl-f061. JU8T roducod. Porkvlow Ap.,l ·

m.nlS . ICfOU from Iha Cor.'vill. Pond. Enlry 'yllom, garage parking OV)"oI>It , gas flroptaco , dItek. iaundry on III., eats allowed. Available now. Ca" Lincoln Reel Ella". 338-3101 .

TWO BEDROOM II FALL 8PECIA~1I1I

low. CIIY 2 bedroom. 2430 MUSCATINE AVE.

HIAT PAID, ON euSlINE. WATEFI PAID

FREE STORAGE, BEDFIOOM BALCONY.

CALL D.P.I. 351 .. 462

The Daily Iowan · Iowa City. Iowa· Friday. September 12. 1997 • 98

DUPLEX FOR RENT HOUSE FOR RENT:

II ONI MONTH FAIE"" AYAI~A'~I OClobtr. •

822 EWllh lnOlon. CIo ... lo down· ~IMITED TlME-CA~ TODAY THIlEE bedroom , unlquo hom~ on 1OwO, Iatg4 o.drooml. """'Shed, off· CORALVILLE 2 BEDROOMS I ~~~~~:"::~~=- I ~~~~ffi~~~~ campus. Two balllrooml, WID hook. IhMlporldng. Mor1IIHo·rnonlh Itas. ClOSfTOfVfllYTHINOIII I' Ii I ups, muslsee. Prico Jusl r.duced. $22&. ~I-f370. 970 SO. FT. HUGI WID Call Lincoln Rlltl E'lale, 338-3701 : 'Irr houso In !Q;;Iclly. CIo .. In, !IUS STOP ON SITE THIIEE'lOUr bedroom house. CIO$.-ono bedroom In lour bedroom house. .84 A HOME ne-1'!'!!_~~~!'!"'--- 12*"tll, f~mllh«l klllng room, CiA. :111 .. 482 D.P.I Mor,lIk •• hom. In , pols negollable. Avallablt nllw.

I ~~~~~~==:-I hardwood 1l00ft, Iwo balhrooms Ihan an epanmtt111 :"!~~:-:~::-::o::=:- 33&-7047. ' • I' Ava"oblt Janutty Ihrough JU ly. 1Ti'~;::::;::~::::: =::;=;;:;;=-1 701 Sirab SI. $450. Oftsl,.ol pari<" Thi.two bedroom duplex ':: VOOACINTlII 3e8-75e:), taundryon-lilo. Calsollowed,onbus· Ing. CalI3504.1~ . oN",prlvale parking. laundry -=:;:~~-:-::--=~~~ HOUSE FOR SALE ' I txI_nc:ed INtrIICtion CIUNt.... CAT _ ; ~ng; ~.. IIno. AVIlIat>It now. Jult redUCtd. Call - facilities and MOREl ::c

"'1;;~;;'Ii,;;;;;':~ -0.... ....... PlrkiniaU06 utl lil l" Inelud,d; 1.inc00n Raol Ella", 338-3101 . tobal·h ,N:...~.odlr~· "!!?ngb,eddr,~:as' ~:, $450 per manit.. BIIAND new W"~J'I" DriWVOlDeondo. JUST 1I.led. Neal as I pin. Plum 1\ ..... . _ . .... - - - u" ~,...... Thomas Reallor. 338-4863 Two bedroom. fir~.... ,dish· Grove ..... homo for only $84,900.

. 337 .. 7 . LINCOLN Heighls. Ronl rtduced. mlcrowavt, Ilundry, clo.o 10 down· two bedroom, ... /sIde, wash ... , garage aV81Iabl • • 337-8441. Excollonl Condllion wilh mlny up. DOWNTOWN, .poc/o<J'; hlrdwOOd On, and two bedroom unn •. ClolllO lown,on bualln,. S6OOImonlh, utiliH.. smail ga"'''', NEW two bedroom, 15 mlnules from dales. Call JennHer Nos8<; d.y 351. 1Iocrt; 'otdId gtut cabonttry; $255 mtdleal ond donlal school • . Under· paid. available 1015. Oelober only negotiable. $550 Unlverally by North Llberly goll 3355 .• vonloos 338-11933. Coldwell -,.. Included, 337"185. ground perl<lng , oItvalors. CiA. cat. $200 monlh . 351-9357. Available mid-Oe. coun • . Flreplace. dICk. garogo. ~ Bonk ... Real E.lal. Profoulonal •. I~~~~~---- IlfTlIA Ioroe, ha"'w~s, "'" allOWed. AV8llablt now. $460-$575. AOt3I1A. Two bed,oom downlown I ~~~~~:::-D::=:-::;: pllanceo. Securlly .y.lem. S625. I'!'!!~~"'!"~~~ __

:'~:'::C~~~2~=~5~ "~":'lJSiLJ,~ oeotonTW'lpn'~81"" 1 E'_Ia_It. ~~~~a. ~:I'-=koul~~u~;:das~~$~5817'rO: ~~7:=, =i~~~ ~om UIHC, MOOB1SLAELHEOME Q6gQ ,. 5torogo oll·"r." par ng .• aun ry . CIA. No pols, laundry, oll'slroot F R I~=,::",:,=,=,~~:-::,~~ I 'ALL LIAIINO Ntwfy ramodolld . S380· water paid . Keystone Proparlle. I . Availabl.lmmedloltly. 31 g.1~::-:';~~;"':-:-:--:--.-:~

-~~~~---- Two bloc., I'om downlown. Each Imme- 33~88. 354-9432. 1190 18x80 two bedroom plus cliIn. room /las own sInI<, rtfr\gttaIor, NC. ADU3. Two bedroom, ono balhroom two balh<ooml. covered carport, ~ov. Silot. balh .nd kllchon wllh mil.. apartmenl. Prlvale parl<lng. on bu.· .,ed pol'o. CIA. 337,7586. only. $220 par monlh plus tlKlrie. line. $5001 monlh. Thomas Reallors. 1_

C1f1354-2233, Iller hOurs call 337· 33&-4853. Novomber \-1S. Cui. ' 14,70, Ihree bedroom. one

~!!~~~~~~~ 4M3. - _, _Ide, porch, bathroom 517,924 -fAli LeASING. ~ HoIpIIaI k> Remodeled. poll _ .28,40 Ihr .. bedroom, $26 ,900. calion , Roomi sla,lIng al $2<01 ~. Horilhtlmer 1""","_lnc\ "",",", ail UOI. 1*4. Shar. kilt"",, AVAILABLI now. 207 Myrtle Ave., 1~-6965 and bath. C<11135I-8990. neor low school. Two bedroom. $470 Hazelton. Iowa. •

plus UllliIl ... CATS OK. 3504-5056. HOLIDAY MOBI~I HOME COVill CATS, two Declroom, 10 mlnUie walk I ~~~!!!!.~~~==:::- North liberty UIHC, parking, Iloraga. 50487. 338· 1: 1;:~;:.;.c'7'-:-::-;:--;;=-;;:C:- Price 10 ... /. Fnancingavail_. Spa-7939. ' cieus mobile home 101. also avaIlaIlIo.

Paved S"eeIS. S 165/ monlh plus 0Ii11-tie •. 1319)337.7166; 131 9)626-2112.

Il~~~~~~~~li~ii~iiii~~~~~~iFlF:~~I~iiii~~~~i LA~GI, quilt. Prlvolo ,,'rlOor.lor. DOWNTOWN: Speclou. ba.ement """, mbl>wavt. No poll. no 1fI\Ok. In oIdtr _; two bedrooms; SI'Ion 1nQ,"'- now. S\75-S210. After IDllI1lfOO11na. wIndows; newWlances; nawcarpal' 7.30 p.m ... 354-2221 . log; $495 utlilt la.lnciuded; 337 .. 78S. NUll TO PLACUC'N-AD='1--- EAST Iide . Oulel. two bedroom In 4. COMI TO IIOOM 1/iCO .... UNI- pial , WID on premises. Carpel, air, CAT1OH8 CENTEA FOIl DlTAIL8. perl<,ng. August. 33& ... m4.

II()H.tMOI(IIHG .... turr'IIshed doH HEAT and waler p81d. Laundry facilily quilt. uw.tioo~. S280, prIvaIo In building. Fiv. minute walk 10 Pen- 1994 MITSUBISHI 3000 GT belli S320. 338-04070. \oCftll S6401moolh plu. Ulllnl ••. Call 1996 NISSAN PICKUP

13K miles. Air bags. ASS. Red. 5 spd: OUIIT, CI ... ·ln N • ., Hlnchor. ::JS4.88:::7.:::I,::s.'--;,-c-:-:--:-::--:-:-:-::::=::= Red, immaculate, 31k, snow tires, $1 90 .. _....-. ~ana 1~:~~:~7::=~:.~::-;:; I HUGE two Iladtoom. two balhroom ryth'

I!~~~~~~~~~ laundry Avo/IabIo Immodloloty. Sap.1~~~~~:~~~~~~::~ oporlmanl In hl.lorlc houl • . One one owner, power eve mg, No NC. Nicely accessorized. Bed mal.

- ~ ... CM ~, block lrem campu •. 10 mlnul .. ~ ranty 321 1466 1100 ..... a,l.ble In foroo hOu" downlown. Uvlng, dining, lull kllchen i,~~w~a;r~;'~;'~~'~~l ~=-:=:;;;;;;~:;I;;;;;:;;:!;;:u~~~;; c:toM 10 _ campus nillf Pen- with dilhwasher, flroplaca, hardwood

" IICrtlt. Shared -" baIIIs, and t/oor$ . .. erel .. room, por!<lng, S800I

Uke new. $8150 o.b.o. 354·3799.

common roomt. Qurot, ac_1e on· monlh . A.allobll 9/15. 33&-8328,

"""'fMIIL RMoor.- - and ~ ~\oaV~. ~me~ssag~.7:' =~;;;T-=== I.;,...;......;;.,,""'"~~-:--- aporaIrVOl1moop/lefo. C1f1 351-6313 LARGE quiet eastSide. CIA, .... urily ~"""- ... ..;;. ... __ r -1f'9I__ __ ,n"ane" oll.slreel parklno, dl.h.

IHOftT Of tont"liInft ,.,\afs. Fra.t washer. mecrowave, carpeted, near -, - phone, ""~\IM and '"<ICtt bu_.S600. 338-7547 or 338-5600. mor. CM 35404400. LARGE Iwo b.droom, AlC, WID

hook-<IPS,wat. paid. Busline. $515. 351-3404.

I~~~~~~;;;;;;"~IILAIIG! two bedroom. Pari<fng, mi· ~,--_-,;-.,-:--:- II crowlva, NC. No "molong. no pets. A.allabl. now. Le •••. $5251 $57S. Attar 7;3Op.m. Cail354-:I22I .

ROOMMATE ., WANTED/FEMALE

AVAIUILI .o. u rg. roqm 'n ..... """"- CIoot1I.IIII.wIdr)." "" \1M paod 131 QI -.t~. SoIpI_ r.nt ""oil,btt. Non·smok" . Sll-1221

VAN BUREN !,,:VILLAGE Leasing For Fall

Sept.Rent Free 2 bdrm $610 + electric 3 bdrm $660 + all utils 3 bdrm $710 + electric

One year leaser

Deposit same ilS rent. • Dishwasher,

• Disposal • Free off·slnel parking

, laundry. • No pels

351-0322

Tiffin 2 bdrm, 2 bathroom . $475 plus all utili­

ties. One year lease. Deposit same as

rent. OfW, disposal, CIA, taundries.

No pets. 351-0322,

2SEDROOM APARTMENTS AVAIlABlE

NO DEPOSITS BUS SERVICE

ELIGISILITY REQUIREMENT IS U Of I REGISTERED STUDENT

RATES FROM $336-1410

CALL U Of I fAMILY HOUSING 335-9199

ONI tledroom. AlluOO S3OQIU"""H

~""~.=~~~~_IInCfuaed, 128, Dotart "*-- 338-1242. ~~~~~~~::= of1lclenc:y Moer ...... , "!!

r,'~;3~~. sg~~ THREf/FOUR -. $350/ BEDROOM

apIrImenls avaiflll>lt III ui l/iliOl Included. CIII '"0 AYI. COIIALYILLI, SullIooM 03 Ihr .. bedroom, CIA, dlshwash,,)

Till Lon A'AIITMINTt flundry , off·lIr •• 1 plr1tlng. SSQS 210 E.8Ih SI CoraMI~ month . Pol. okay. 35I-f344, anor

I badroom, M), S3aO Olt·n", 6p.m. porkJnQ one block to buo. No potl. 7;ADf= U""40;;', -:;N:-ow~or It 00 _a 1001

338-3130, lIl"a bedroom oportfMIIlln CoraMtit. !'!'!" __ ~~~~~~- O/~ . <fl,hwllhor, $&001 monlh .

PT MBER RENT FREE! TWO BEOROOM =;~Thrao bedroom, _"~o

Emerald COllrt Apartments neal H_, oII-.lrMi PO""OO; dloh·

BflIroom ,$6 0/$650 lnel . water. :AC' =;",S::;;:'~ =~~ef."Y. KOYlionoPmp-undry, pool, off- tre t parking, No _100, no pet,. ADf~', Four

on bu line, 24 hr. maintenance. I looT~~=:r~IA:'~~:-:::'oom

33' 7-4323 aparl",.n! 1500 plu, YIIIIIII • . No WIfIt 10 campua. low. ~_'._'''''''' pRCII :IIl~t Iobldoy. FIIda'(&- IIomt, on-stf"' parldng, &pm. lias plldl Kay,tono Proporllas . 'WO 'tdroom IPlrtm.nl.. 33B-f288, hMt, .h...."., gtrbegI f:::A::-Ll~L.:;..-:.I-ng-.. -:37'ba- d-;"roo- m-:-' 11 wtlIC ft. rmg.1Iior, Htut\ty' manti Ivallll>le, CIII Hodgt

a"1r1tlbie1mm«lilttly, '1//0 slnrcilon 3504-2233. 1ft" hours call 2218 337-3611 .

1995 MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE White, tinted windows, bra, pw, pi,

cell phone, gorgeous, 40k $14,000/o.b,o, 339·8313.

1996 NISSAN SENTRA GIE Black, 5-speed, AlC, cruise,

CD. 18,000 miles, $12,800/neg.358-0426,

1990 TOYOTA FORERUNNER 4WO, V6, SR5, automatic, fully loaded, CO, cassette, phone,

Much more. 337·7050.

1992 NISSAN EXTRA CAB 4-cylinder, AlC, 5·speed, $6800. To view come to: 1925 Meadow

Ridge In. IC 354·7758.

1987 NISSAN PATHFINDER 4x4. Runs great, looks great. New tires, battery, exhaust.

$6,200. 339-1177,

1989 DODGE CARAVAN Cruise, Very well maintained. Good body condition. Lt. blue.

$2,500.351·0016,

1990 SAAB 900 TURBO SPORTS CONVERTIBLE

Fully loaded, leather, 77k, excellent condition. $11 ,500. 338·7015.

1993 PONTIAC SUNBIRD Convertible, AlC, cruise, Pl, PS,

PW, AM/FM stereo cassette, auto. 40,000 miles. 337·5156.

1.

19L-9-4-F-O-R-D..;;::!EXPli~-OR:---'ER Black, 4x4, 5·spd, AlC, cruise;:

all power, 23,000 miles. :: , $15,800/neg. (319) 339·0988 :

1992 YAMAHA FZR 600: Low miles, cover, tank bra .• ' Great shape. $G,100/o.b.o.

351·5717 .

Almost perfect. 40 + mpglhw, 30 ely. Recent 1ires, brakes, exhaust, waler •

pump, major tune·up. $3,500. 621-QS56.

Advertise in The Daily Iowan

/I III I ( III \ Iff )H\I\(. '"I '/'1/" H

Classifieds Y

;

335-5784 by phone :; 335-6297 by fax .

• • I • • • • I I I I • • I • • • I • • • •

A Photo is Worth A Thousand Words

SELL YOUR CAR

30 DAYS FOR $40 (photo and

up to · 15 words)

1113 IATURN ILi 4·dr, air , AMJI'M radio, power locks, automBlic . Runs well $0000.00. Call XXX·XXXX

We'R come out and take a photo of your car Qowa City~e area only)

.Your ad wtll run for 30 days - for $40 OeadUne: 2 days prior to run date desired

For more infonnation COnlact:

~iRa===;. 335·5784 or 335·5785

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

=" :I -

...

_.

_ ....

....

, Better Ingredients. 4JI

Better Pizza.

fr!---------329 s. Gilbert-St.~ .: ~ ' Student Spe-cla'---!!~

358 8282 I .. BUY A LARGE ; I

'.'. ,_ : '. . ' :;: .,' FOR THE PRICE :: : . .- 0 -I

FREE DELIVERY AIIIJ CARRYOUT! ~ F A SMALL . - ;: I . ........ ... .. .. I • ~-'-30""'" -". . ., . ' . . . ' ... ...... ~ .. ~- -," ,. ,

' ...... ~: .• "":"' ;> ; "C 'J~ . • ,~~ , ••• : : . ~ .. . ii\";";\ '~'~i'.{:~,.j,;...;(",,:> 1 .1 , ,,':: ' , CuslOm:;~~withl~~er.yaljdonlyatparticipatinglocal!ons, . I - - . _. •• ,... ,.,., ~ , .". , , , '" . ' ... _ ~ _ .... _ app . 'taX AddiJ/QIllIl1OPpjl1gs elC\l\ ",' " - JI ..... -, ~... ..- .. , • J • _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ ~ J • , • t ~ , " !' ••• ,. ••• ~ - _ _ , •• ~.~ ':W'w '.

a" '< CIt n o -,. a.

:I ~

......­IbYJL ~ ... n .. , ......... Iinlbn .~Kr.urrr ... ".., M_fun

MlI .. ~ Tn.!) \IIo\r\

~

'\1 .. ' Tb;mcw~ Rnan R.:r.,

pnw ..... \IIo1nJam 1:a.W)

f'IIVVVVDIIIIr Hob ftJlry

.JnIlnnr HiI!I!In." II .... " I .... "

AlriWiH-' JiJl] J..l~ltlanl

Ibri..CaktM11 III ...... ' Man'k .... I k·~, .u : ..... ty .1uh \\<ilaJl.l lalhy .... 1U-

OOVJIRl'IIO'l'O n .... T1unl""lIl

, 1 ,. .

i mandatory. Anual . - L , atteadaDce a' \ll pmesiao~

i Not only d.o such 1 aational prJWft'S as UN) i and 'I'uha CO~ 1.0 Kin­i nick Stadium Uris sea­i SOD, the Haw1teyes play 1· four B" Thn teams that l combined to win five

,. \ C(fnference games last UI • 1111

1 year. For those of you \ non-actuary science \ majors, that is an aver· \ age of just more than lone win per team.

Chris Snider

i How bad is Iowa's 1 home schedule? Well. 1 we're all pretty daJn excited about this 'lUl­l sa game, that's bow had. ~ I'm beginning to wonder if the Hawkeyes l lost to Tulaa on purpose last season just to ~ increase excitement for at least one game l this year. 1 But wait, you say, we're in the Bi« Ten ron­~ ference. We have a contract to play four con­l ferenc:e games each year against teams from 1 the best football conferenoe in America. 1 How good are Iowa's home Big Ten games? l Well, all four teams fired their coaches last

lUll .. about tM op __ u.a- m..t a.aclliae u:P OUI·

~S«adjmn buun F"" ~ rolla out 01 t.d .

The folb \hat .. n feee palot aft to have plenty of black and .,old 1.0 wben thi8 -..em is QYa'. Body pGnL-...o· don shoWd in~ their I'IlIIIMY m ~ aDd bratwunta bec:au.e tb8'e will be a pletho­ra of t.hoIIe two t.hiDp lOiDR down Hawk· eye Can's throa1.8 ",hen the eecond tailgate begins at halftime of each game.

But, hey. You lOt a problem Wlth Iowa's home schedule? Move 1.0 Norway. Or at least go 1.0 a few away games.

rm not saying )'Ou should entirely skip Iowa's home games. It's still Kinnick Stadi­um.U'1F still the excitement of a football Sat­urday. Just. don't expect the GameDaycrew.

!flowa's bome schedule is a 48-hour PBS telethon, then the road schedule csn put even NBC's Thursday night line-up to shame. Trips to Michigan. Ohio State, Northwestern and Wisconsin are truly must-see TV.

Ohio State is ranked No.9 in the nation and Michigan is No. 14. That's not to men­tion the fact that both schools have great football environments and are perfect placed to take in a game.

Northwestern and Wisconsin aren't ranked this week, but that doesn't make

s - -_1_1_.-ROUSE m 4

I~ uy Ie. ftm t.o waId\ the Hawtw,. upon them,

IcnPa f.- would like DOthina more than t.o pt even with North-..at..D Cor knock· inc olT the Hawkey" the Jut two yean . And tryou can't have. pod time in Madi­son. WlSC., then you Jual. bctt.r ,pVC! up.

Sure, all th_ gamea are sold out, but that doean't mean you can'l pay a sc:slper way too much money to all in a .eat )'Ou can barely see the game from -

Or you can jlat go to tbe town of the game, sit in a local watering hole to watch the game on TV. Then when the loc:sls and Hawkeye fans go out on the town after the game, HEY. you're already there.

That sure beats sitting at home and watching the game while you study for your Monday Spanish test. Iowa City is dead on away game weekends, anyway.

But if you have issues with travel 01' just don't have the funds, there's always next year, when all these road games become home games. The only problem is, Dwight, Sherman, Banks and company will be long gone, and 80 might DeVries.

So enjoy 'em while you can.

Chris SIIlder is a UI senior and Pregame co-editor. [

Visit us at: http://www. uiowa.edu/ -

dlyiowan/ postgamel

RESTAURANT & NIGHTCLUB" -. THE PRE-GAME PARTY

"IOWA CITY'S ORIGINAL SPORTS BAR, RESTAURANT, AND NIGHTCLUB SINCE 1975"· - ." ... - i ~ -l... OYER-200 PICTURES AND I

THE RELDHOUSE BURGER BASKET VOTED #1 IN THE BIG TEN! ,

THE FIELDHOUSE HOT WINGS THE BEST WINGS IN TOWN

DANCE FLOOR OPEN AFTER THE GAME

III ;s::

FRONT PAGE HEADUNES ARE BACK UP! TAKE A WALK 'MROUGM HAWKEYE HISTORY!

. It" dtIl'--., .n, tho Ha ..... ". lead _ , the natio" in Karin

0 •• , tou-I ofTcn and~d __ and t.alJbaclr ,.. ¥'t&lI Ban la Ole NCAA'. ludin naber.

Thlaa , on tb. other hand, rank. 93rd in ru.hinC 01T_. l04th in to~ deferuM!, 89th in " ", V scormg defense and 109th in nlSb defenle. Andy

It'. only one game into the season for both Hamil teams ~n~ .Iowa did lon play DIVISIOn l-AA Northern Iowa, but th, stat8 don't mislead anything sboutthat game. Plus the Hawkeyes came away from the game nearly scratch free.

But no matter who the opponent is, you always have to execute and Iowa did just that. The Hawkeyes didn't waste any time­outs. In fact, Lhey saved one more than they should have when time expired at the end of the firsL half.

Last year the Hawkeyes entered the ThI­sa game after an impressive 38-13 win

HERE'S ONE WAY TO REACH

OVER 50,000 PEOPLE EVERY DAY. <:~ '?"VA";A 0,,1))1'1.."

-sa 9

an. s-.r.I'repee--'-.......... ...,. ........ HI_!fIe_

fnItNIl s..,n ...... IDy CnIII, AssistalIt

,..,MrSIYS If".. trtIIs .. Ion footDI1J writer - Jan!d DeYries.

the receivers in I TlIe-.eu.,pass,tIIe..-tsdsherets. yardage, Matt Sl:Mr- Neither wm man threw 16 ~ and Banks ..... the TIm Dwiebt. You can bet that ~t_'t star of the show. Are you -in.c any aim· go another game ..nthouL. catch agaiDa ilarities? ThJaa. But once ~ the otI'enaive star

Lightning doesn't strike twice, though. will be 'ntvian Banks_ DaVld didn't take OD Goliath for a rematch 'I1Je Golden Hwricane defense bad. trou­A blind hog finds the hog feeder every once bie defending the TUn when Cincinnati in a while. Pick a cliche and insert here. ru.sl-t far362yan1sandBanb willremai.n Lut year. the Hawkeyes didn't take the the nation's leader with another 200-yard Golden Hurricsne seriously. They didn't perform.ance. Another strong running per­eveD have their I1IUDf!8 on the '-:ita oftbeir Connance will elimina"" the Th1aa pull rush jerseys by game time. and give Matt Shennan time to hook up with

This year the Hawkeyes are like ·old mules with blinders on .· They've been focused on this game .sinoe the spring and what are the odds of Tulsa playing its best

any desired member-oCthe butt-Gabd..-. Shennan will once again not do_anything

to hurt the Hawkeyes. Another basjc 15-for-25 day with 200 yards paYing will keep the [owa offense cruisiDR-

The Hawkeyes will face another pass

f ". rl' •

ks •

t.IWI time there .. 'I. _ .. ~twd~ FitqPraIcf hM _ eroe"r C __ o(. ___ a

fa wea CaaweII and Da.moa s.~ who cau,sbt.u ~ lOr 127,... ap'''''' the Bewcat.L CaawelI., wbocauPt __ .... ea lOr U!O yards ...... the Ha.wb:P-I.­Ma_, is liated .. quHHonable after fIIfIf· feriac • lmee injury in. the drat quarter Jut ,"",*end

IT 'I'u1sII can't im.prove on ita 88 ya:nU rushing against. Cinrinneti, it will be a lone day for ~ Iowa clefea8ive coonli­nator ~ EllioIi will have .... _ aro:JUDd hia neck. 011-.-, play if the Go&deD. Hur­ricane doesn't establi8h • grotIIId attadt.

Tulsa bas a lUDlJ'y '\IWY few team. in 001-lege football have in pIlace kicker ,, __ Andeno.n. Last year An~ hit 20«. 28 field goal attempts and be made his oa1y kick against the Bearcata, • 54-yarder.

Saturday, his three field ____ 't be enough. . _I' 7 is a UI seniar and Pn!pmeco-editDr_

c

IOWA AFGHAN

1 00% cotton, 50"X68"

Black & Gold on cream background.

Machine wash. Only $59.95

Other colleges can be ordered.

Also available ... Wall Hanging

$57.50

~

One X -.&../.,. 16" 11 s 99 •

• • • • • • • • • BONUS BUYS ~ Tames the roar! And a lot more.

Free Muffler installation while you wait. with any purchase : '12" Pokey Stix $3.99 : LIFETIME WARRANTED MUFFLERS : 4 Pepperoni Rolls $3.99 :. Camp .... under car serv1ce .4 whee' aJ1gnment

No appointment necessary.

: 1 0 W· '$3 99 : • Foreign & domestic mufflers • Shocks & Struts • Ings . • • Disc & drum brake service • Trailer hltche. : 2 - 20 oz. soda $2.00 : • CV kWlla III) J , • • ! ~.gurnbyapizza.com : 338-6785 iii : OPEN lATE 7 DAYS A VVEEK CD ,+~ ~ i'1:::) : Ken Va'entine, Manager l .. w I MUFFLER & BRAKE !.. - - - - -- - ----- - - - ---- - - ----- - --------- - ---- - ~ 510 S. Riverside Dr. -Iowa city ii:I:

OPEN AT

llAM

BEST NIGHTCLUB

SCENE IN THE ENftRE STATE

SELF SERVE VODKA BAR! featuring Bloody Mary's, Screwdrivers, $350 Greyhounds, Mardas & Sea Breezes. Pint

• AFTER7J£ G4IE ·R£ELNE IIJSI;WI1H KEVIl S.F.EUlT trJdCCllERPOCKET1 , __ - ;

Kicked around the idea of gOillf

somewhere after the game? ~,Carlos OKelly's.

, MEXICAN CAFE . L,~,.., =FoH,l.e4~,.., ~.

Carryoul Available 1411 S. Walerfronl • Iowa CilY

354-5800

Guys Potato Chips

or Bid&ies Pre-pri~ $2.99

FOODS -The Spend Less Store These temporary price reductions

are effective Sept. 12 - Sept. 16. We g1a.dJy accept Food Stamps and WIC Vouchers- FREE bags to bag your groceri~~ in ___ at ~ Food .

• Prepriced items cUscounted 10% every day

• 20% off greetiDC cards everyday •

• YDDJ" ,.'OC8I',V bags are always freeat Cub

• We sell only USDA Choice Beef

• Money order8-490 RVm'Vda.v

• Western Union • We sell post;a&e stamps • Lotto • Lottery • We sen pone cards • «;11", aasM,ng .•. , \

USDA Inspected.

IO'W'8. Pork

c:pw:yr 01J".r ova IIDIW..-rIUU'ICIJ IIA8'1'OP 8'l'O_

Jluppert Boad.

~ {II] ~ I; IwaJDaanl 1---,1 ,~ --IliCbwql_.

_ Hwy 1 West, Iowa City OPl!:R 84 HOUBS - 4- DAYS A WIlIiK

QUANTrrY RIGHTS RESERVED

lb.

1/2 gal.

IOWA STATE BANK & TRUST COMPANY

Iowa City and CoraIviIk 319-356-5800 Member FDIC

JIaan: Mmut.;y-Pridq

lOaDl-8pm Satur4a;y 9am-6pm 8nnda;y lOaDl-3pm

~, SHAZAM.

SlA.l

s The Iowa football team does not intend on letting histOf)'

(aka last year's loss to lu\sa) repeat itself

By CKRIS SXIOER T HE D A ILY IOWA ."

On Sept. 21. 1996, Iowa football coach Hayden Fry srood in the shower of an abandoned locker· room under Skelly Stadium in Tu lsa . Okl a .• expl a ining to

reporters how h is team , an 18'point favOl-ite , lost to Tulsa. ~early one full year later, in the plush

performance . -Coech Fry. be's got a iiQre gut from that

Joss,-thejunior from Aplington. lOW'&, wd. "It's just one of thOse things that stuck with him and he doesn't want to lose to them again.-

Fry said be has been reminding his team and his coaching staff on the Tulsa game since spring practice. The Hawkeye coach said \Vake Forest's second stnught upset of Northwestern last week reiterated the

confines of the Jacob- , son Building on the -Coach Fry. he's got a sore campus of the Uni- f h~ 1 I"

importance of not assuming bis team will be motivated on its own. ,ersi~ of Iowa, Fry gut rom t at OSS. t s Just

was ~till trying to one of those things that explam exactly wbat

"(I've been) riding them hard as to what Tulsa can do: Fry said. "We won't know until Saturday whether it pays off or not, but my coaching staff has taken more ftack from me. After all, ifwe win that ball­game last year, we

happened. stuck with him and he ' Our guys were

focused . ready to play. - the 68-year.old Hawkeye coach said, "But when you look at the film, you can see they didn't play with the same enthu­siasm and determi­nation (as Tulsa).

doesn't want to lose to them again."

Iowa junior defensive lineman Jared DeVries

"Particularly in critical down situations, we really looked .. . dumb.'

The Hawkeyes had ample opportunities to win or at least tie the ballgame. Twice in the fourth quarter, Iowa drove the ball inside the Thlsa ten-yard line, needing only a touchdov..'O to tie. And twice in the fourth quarter, the Hawkeyes t:uIned the baIl over on downs inside the ten·yard line.

Although the Hawkeyes went on to a nine·win season that included a trip to the Alamo Bowl, that one loss still seems to haunt the team.

Another regular season win in all like­lihood would have put Iowa in the Outback Bowl. Instead, the Outback Bowl bypassed the Hawkeyes for a Michigan team with the same record.

Hawkeye defensive lineman Jared DeVries said Fry has made it perfectly clear that he doesn't want a repeat <!flast year's

T ULSA 27, I OWA 20 Sept. 21, 1996, Skelly stadium, Tulsa Oklahoma

Ian T .... Stats Tulsa

14 First Downs 23 48-217 Rushes-Yards 42-107

357 Passing Yards 149 366 Total Offense 464

22-38-1 Passes 10-21-0 5-42.0 . Punls-avergage 7-40.4 . 2-0 Fumbles-lost 4·1

win 10 ballgames." A major factor in Tulsa stepping up to

beat Iowa was the emergence of Qolden Hurricane quarterback John Fitzgerald. After a shaky start to the season, Fitzger­ald hit on 22·of·37 passes for 357 yards against the Hawkeyes.

Golden Hurricane receivers Wes Caswell and Damon Savage combined to catch 11

PETE THOMPSONflHE OAIL Y IOWAN

Thlsa coach Dave Rader was aU smiles during last year's game, but the Hawkeyes plan on giving him little to be happy about this year.

passes for 221 yards. All three players are back this year.

Iowa safety and team co-captain Kerry

Cooks, who said the Tulsa passing attack "tortured" the Iowa secondary, said this game will be one of redemption.

"'!'bey guys are motivated," Cooks said. "They know what that loss did to us. There's not much that I need to say, just remind them what Fitzgerald and some of those receivers did to us. It was an embar­rassment to us, as far as the secondary and overall defense."

One theory in sports is that teams leazn from a loss. After a week off, the Hawkeyes followed the Tulsa game with a weak show­ing in the first half against Michigan State at home. Iowa had to rally from a 17·0 deficit to win the game.

"I'd like to think we could have leazned on the run with a win, maybe squeaked one out in overtime and still won and still learned," DeVries said.

DeVries, who said he will draw upon the loss as motivation at times in the game, is not worried about a repeat of what hap­pened last year, particularly because this years team is a little IDore mature.

"We're kind of a business·like attitude," DeVries said. "This team is a little bit dif­ferent than last. I think we'll prepare for every game like we need to. I think that was evidj!nt against UN!."

But Fry is not taking anything for grant­ed.

5-50 Penalties-yards

30:00 Possession Time

4-30

30:00 PETE THOMPSONII'HE DAILY IOWAN

Iowa quarterback Matt Sherman t ries to e lude a Thlsa defender last season.

"There's not anything that you can take for granted nowadays with young people, on or off the field, in the classroom, down­town or an~ing else," he said.

gg ..c I .

, ,

WbaL .... 1UlI '. IDP pa_ r ill Iowa'.

ro.~k. IIOphomure Randy R.e baa an u troaomic:a1 300.1 elliri

Yes, Reinerab .tatiatkally the top l' in the B~Ten after lIDO -"- Okay.ao

Rein .... \brew only ..... en .,.-in Iowa', opener againat. Nonhern lOW'll. com­

p1dinl five for 112 yards. But the fact remaina - Reiners' debut in • Hawkeye uniform was impTeMive.

Fry'e preeeaaon auumptioll is still accu­rate. 10wa'IJ starter. Matt SMrmaD, i. sec­ond in the conference with • 205.8 effi­ciency. Sherman completed nine of 16 patIII­es for 167 yards and three touchdowns.

-r got lucky on a coupLe long passes," Reinel'S said. "It'll change this week. Hope­fully Matt will get his stats up and be back to where he should be . •

The 6-foot-3, 2()()..pound Reiners threw for two fourth-quarter touchdowns. He hooked up with Richard Willock five BeC­

onds into the period for a 26-yard touch· down, and Later threw 27 yards to Ri.ccha­rd Cartel' for six more points.

The assumed heir apparent to Sherman, who is a senior, HeineN had 4,385 passing

yard liDe with I, _ncb remam'lll, Reiners failed to alert the refereea t.ha1 he wanted a tim,

The clock ran out and [owa took a 38-0 lead mb! halftime. In a ell*! pme, the aU.­take could ha_ been c:oatly.

"Randy should have gotten in the face of the ref to call the time-out," Fry said. "He called it in tinie, Out the officWa didn't recognize it.'

Reiners agreed. -rhatjust. shows why I have to get in the

ballgame: he aaid. "I ha ... en't played for three years, and I made a mistake."

Take away that one blunder. however, and it was impossible not to be optimistic following Reiners' performance. Sherman is considered one of the top signaJ-caJJers in the conference, and Iowa has high hopes for Reiners.

Compared to their Big Tho counterparts, Iowa quarterbacks have had a dispropor­tionate amount of succesa in recent years.

it "MrnraDJr _ jaa

where be ... with the o&naa. out. and had a 10l. 0( ~."

Hawkeye fans bope and pny SbKman wiU remain. h.a.lthy. bOct ifaomelhiD. abould happen to him. Heinen ill Mntident be can do th.! job

Fry ~nt through a quarterbaek con­tro\ia.j at mid nOll last year:. Many faDs and reporter. thought Fry .hould live Oackup Ryan DrisoolI a chance after Sher­man IJtrug&'led qain.st Northwestern at bome.

No such controversy will develop this season, if Fry has anything to say about it.

"Randy's just ~ming on .. a quarter­back," Fry said. 'There'!! no comparUon at this point."

Healthy competition is good, as it can improve the starter. But Reiners under­stands what he has to do this IIe88On.

"Matt's a great quarterback." Reiners said. "He's proven himself. My role is to to learn as much as I can from him."

:k

tklpefully Mart will his stats up and be back to where he sbouldbe ...

Iowa backup Quarterback

Randy Reiners

)]lCOJ 8'!)) JP~ ~

PARTY SANDWICHES

HUNGRY' HOBO t' Cab~ Serves 11-12 $21.15 4' Side-car Sena 2I-Z4 $31.15

517 S. Riverside Dr. 337-5270 " BOJ:-car Serves3'''' $55 .• 416 1 st Ave. • Coralville 358-5857

DA SAtuRDAY

Arts&. e'ZA~sShoh1 Sunday, Sept_ 14th· 9 a.In. - 4 p.In.

All you can eat . Chili $599 , Doors open at 80m

Draws • LIVE MUSIC Friday & Saturday

• VALET PARKING lH:lose 1 ' __ • - - :>arurday & Sunday.BRUNCH 8-2pm ~ $.5,99 .. ~ , f... ..., .. .............. .. ;j ... 1 I! ... t 55 ,

Carver Hawkeye Arena Iowa City. Iowa

One of Iowa's Largest Indoor Shows WITH OVER 200 TALENTED EXHmrroRS SELLING : Dolls. Ceramics. W ood Crafts and Furniture, Appliq ued

Sweatshirts. Jewelry. Crocheled Items. Paintings, Howe r Arrangeme nts. Pottery, Stained G lass, Picture Frames. Clocks. Rugs. Etc .

ALL EXHIBITORS LOCATED ON GROUND LEVEL CONCOURSE ADMISSION: .Just $1.50 FREE PARKING

Show Promoter: Callaluzn Promotions, 3L 9-652-4529 . i 2 I II . 'dElId £ 5

;.

Busch & Busch Ught 24-120Z~ $999

+ deposit

Miller Beer ~~,

~ 299 Genuine Draft, tNGenuine

, Draft Lite

\AI A L L

A B E E 5

;~cans

Clarks don't just last, they outlast.

~ "S~ ",,,-

Sy~1'e Mall ORENZ 132 s_ Clinton 351-8373 339-.1053

Boot Shop Voted Best Shoe Store in Iowa City 3 Years in a Row!

EANS ............. $22'-

..... ' ................ $25 ...................... $:32 ($54)

MOSSIMO ..•••........ $28-$32 ($64)

Ull ER5/AGNELLI .... $22-$38 ($65) t~AucMtM w-"-~and ~~.

Racquet M~~kr Bike & Ski Eastern Iowa's largest selection of new

and innovative mountain bikes. Gary Fisher Gary Fisher designed Frames

Mongoose Best Components for your J.u.V.l.n:

Specialized' Metal Matrix Nishiki Best Bike for the Buck

All models now on sale!

Rollerblade calls this a workout. Sure you'll sweat.

You'll breathe. You'll push. But all you'll remember is the

grin. Rollerblade sales and rentals All models now on sale!

~!lOllerb/ade.

--

i Ion STriTE WIleD: Sept. 20 Wlme: Ames, Iowa Stadlem: Jack Trice Stadium C.PKity; 43.000 ncklt Info: the gam~ IS sold out How to gil thl,.: Take I-SO to 1-35. Go North on 1-35 to US 30 and take tf1at to US 69, go North. You 'U be In Ames a short 135.5 miles. Tourist fnfo: Ames IS ·Where the wand meetsl" You can VISit the Botanical Gardens and the Farmhouse Museum. If your lucky, you mighl be abke to ca.lch a concert or show al C. Y. Steven's Auditorium. Wh.re 10 hanll out: Iowa State has its fair share of watering hole, such as People's Bar and GriU, Cy's Roost. But If you feel like bustin' a move, Tazzles might be the bar for you. "0 lit"ets? Watth tile game here: The best places to watch the Hawkeyes embarres ISU are at either Cy's Roost or the Dean's list. Why you Should 110 to this gaml: Hey, it's another chance to watch the Hawkeyes beal up on the lowe/y Cyclones. What more reason do you need. Well, for one, it's the closest game, so there is no reason nol to go. And you can drop in on 'lour old high school buddies who made the wrong decision as to where to go to school.

AT~HIO STATE When: Oct. 4 Where: Columbus, Ohio Stadium: Ohio Stadium Capacity: 89.841 Ticket Info: the game is sold out How to get there: Take 1-80 east to 1-280. Go south on 1-280 to "'inios. Take 1-280 east to 1-74 till you reach Indiana. Go east on 1-74 to 1-465. Take that north to 1-70 and take that east to Broadway. Iowa's longest road trip will take you 552.6 miles away from Iowa City. Tourist Info: If you are bored during your stay in Columbus, live out every college kids dream­Visit the Anheuser-Busch Brewery. Enioy a com­plimentary Anheuser-BuSCh Brewery tour, and learn about the long natural brewing process. Open 'lear round Monday thru Friday. For some good shopping, the City Center is one of the best shopping centers around. Where fa hang out You can't miss with Damon's Sports Bar or BW3, or just hanging out on High Street for that matter, but the best spot is High-Beck, located in the German ViI/age. It you want to move-it, move-it, shake it down 10 the Yucatan liquor Stand. No tickets? Watch the game here: Damon's or BW3. Why you should go to this game: The embar­rassed Iowa two years ago, so you can bet Hay­den Fry will have his team ready this year.

FOOTBALL ROAD

TRIP CHECKUST 1. Cash. Scalpers do ride around on Rollerblades,

but they don't take American Express.

, , , ',,----~-- ------

------

2. Maie. Don't counl on picking up a decent radio station in the middle of Indiana.

3. Pllnty of Hawklye IIear. Show your school spirit and piss ott the locals at the same time.

4. Blanket and warm clo1hes. Wisconsin+November=Brrrr. 5. Empty cans, 1 O-cent depOsit in Michigan. 6. Map, Unlike in Iowa not all gas station attendants speak English. 7. Clean underwear, Do your friends a favor. Respect mom's wishes. 8. Grill and plenty of food. Someone has to teach those Michiganders how to throw a tailgate. 9. Lots of beer. You can't buy it after 9 p.m. in Wisconsin. 10. camera. It's a way of remembering the weekend when your memory fails at the tailaa.le. 11. Condoms. The locals may be friendly. 12. Running shoes, In order to get a clean get away when Iowa upsets Ohio State. 13. Big Iowa nag. ') claim this state in the name of Hayden Fry.'

AT MICHIGAN When: Oct. 18 Where: Ann Arbor. Mich. Stadium: Michigan Stadium CapaCity: 102.501 Tickellnfo: the game is sold out How 10 gel there: Leave Iowa City going easl on 1-80 to 1-280. Take that south until 'IOU reach 1-74. Take that east to 1-80 (yes 1-80 again) to 1-94. Take that all the way to Ann Arbor. If you get lost in Michigan, just look at your hand. Tourist Info: If you always wanted to see your­self on the big screen, venture down to the Ann Arbor Area CVB. Visit the Live ArborCam! The ArborCam is located downtown on liberty and Main (The Parthenon is on the right). This live image will refresh automatically every 2 minutes so sit tight and you'll make it on 1V. ) bet this could be really fun when the bars let out. Spin the cube in the middle of campus. It will change your life. Whlre to hang out: Groove on into Scorekeep­ers and the Touchdown Cafe early in the evening and head on over 10 The Nectarine and Rick's for some dancing later that night. No lidll"? Watch thl gam. hire: Scorekeepers. Why you should 110 to this gaml: This should be one of the better games of the 'lear, with the Hawkeyes having a good chance to knock ott a national power in their own backyard.

AT WISCONSIN Whln: Nov. B Where: Madison, Wisc. Stadium: Camp Randall Stadium Capacity: 76,129 TIcket Info: the game is sold out How 10 IIel there: Go north on S.tate Route 1 to US 151 . Then take that to US 61 and go north. Take US 61 to US 151 and go northeast until you reach US 12. Go east on US 12 to US 151 for a third time and then go north all the way to Madi­son. If you get too bored, count all the cows. It will keep you real busy. Tourist Info: For the person that loves to eat and read, Madison is the place for you. You'll have no problem fulfilling your passions. Madison has the most restaurants per capita of any city in the Unit­ed States. Also Madison ranks second in the nation in per capita book purchases. . Wherl to hanll out: Hang out at Brothers. State Street Brats or Mad Hatter's and see how the No. 2 party school in the nation (according to Princeton Review) lives it up. More adventerous patrons might want to try Bul/winkle's for a night of bumping and grinding with the locals. No tickets? Watch the IIame here: The Stadium Bar. It's right across the street from the stadium. How convenient. Why you should go to this game: This is always a popular trip for Hawkeye fans because, well, the Hawkeyes always-win.

£1£$

, ®

I \ \

-®~\--~~~--

HAWKEYE H UDDLES

(Begin two hour prior to kickoff. excepllSU;

Sepl. 19 at Iowa Slale Holiday Inn­

Univers ity Pari< 1800 50th Sl

West Des Moines, IA

0cJ. 4 al Ohio Stale Holiday Inn-

Inn on the Lane 328 Wesl Lane Ave.

Columbus, DH

Oct. 18 at Michigan Weber's Inn

3050 Jackson Road Ann Arbor, MI

Nov. 8 a/ Wisconsin Wisconsin Union South

227 N. Randall Madison WI

Nov. 15 at Norttrwestem North Shore Doubletree

9599 Skokie Blvd. Skokie. ll

AT NOKI'HWESTERN When: Nov. 15 Where: Evanston, III. Stadium: Ryan FreId Capacity: 49,25& TIcket Info: the game is sold out How 10 gel ther.: Now this is an easy one. Take I-BO east to I-B8. TaKe that east to 1-294. Go north on 1-294 until Dempster SI. Take Dempster east into Wildcat country. If you get lost or need a ride just ask one of the million students from the suburbs of Chicago. Tourist Info: Go pray for a Hawkeye victory at The Bahai Temp)e, it doesn't matier what religion you are, they take'em all. Or head tp Lakeville. It's a big, beautiful park with plenty of picnic area. Where to hang out: Get out early because every­thing closes at 10 p.m., except Burger King. There are only two bars in town and the best one is The Keg. But don't worry, there is this little party town close by. You may know it as Chica­go. NG tlcklts? Watth the game hire: Gary Bar­nett's in the Omni Orrington Hotel. It's the only big screen around. Why you ,houlll go to this game: Two years ago. NU students threw snowballs at Hawkeye players on the sideline. Forget the game. This means war.

Follow the Hawks this season and save money at the same timet

Tile Un_iyersity Book

~tore ~!Aake 5~ off;any Item of apparel for every touchdown the Hawks

score on Saturday's home game. The more they score, the more

you can save.

• Excludes sale items and custom ord~r purchases. • Not valid with any other offer.

• Maximum discount 30%.

[]j ~~~versity -Book -Store Ground Floor, low. Memorial Union . Mon .• Thur. 8am·8pm, Fri. 8.5, Sae. 9.S. Sun. 12 .4 We accepe MC/VISA/AMEX/D iscovH and Student/Faculty/Staff ID

Find us on the Intemet at www.book.ulowa.edu

:.. _ .... "

et,tlUH1 Iff tlu t:jrtift

IJ "tAllf sf "Ew Fleece"

On Sale Now!

The GI1NIt ()utrJoo,. Stcn

NO. BCOLORADOAT NO. 14 MICHlGAN

'l'ha game is dearly the goLden gem lD this week's Big'Thn contests. Unfortunately, it's the last contest in the three­game set the two schools started four years ago.

Wayne Drehs

In those four years, this has built into one of the top non-conference rivalries in the country. From Kordell Stewart's "The Catch" in 1994, to last year's 20-13 Michi­gan win, in which an attempted "The Catch Part II" was swatted to the ground.

Brian Griese will start as the signal caller for Michigan, and lead the Wolverines to a big win.

Michigan 20, Colorado 17

ILLINOIS AT LOUISVILLE New coach Ron Thrner's job at Illinois

was to fix the stagnent offense. Last week­end against Southern Mississippi, Thrner went in with a simple game plan for his unexperienced team, and ended up only using 20 percent of it. The outcome was a 24-7 loss in the season opener.

Louisville comes into the game 0-2 after losing last week to Utah, 27-21. The Car­dinals face No. 1 Penn State next week­end, so unless they want to start 0-4, they better win this weekend.

Louisville 17, lllinois 14

BALL STATE AT INDIANA Cam Cameron's second game as a colle­

giate head coach should be much easier than the first, when his Hoosiers fell to No. 7 North Carolina in Chapel Hill.

The home opener marks the start of the Cameron era at Indiana, where one day Cameron hopes football will be as popular as basketball. Those that are in attendance Saturday will be made believers.

Indiana 28, Ball State 17

MEMPHIS AT MICHIGAN STATE The Spartans scored 42 first-half points

last weekend en route to a 42-10 win over Western Michigan, and have Notre Dame looming in the week ahead. Coach Nick Saban assures his team isn't looking ahead to the Irish, but with as talented as his squad is, it doesn't really matter.

Big plays helped the Spartans run wild last week, forcing seven turnovers, but Saban still wasn't all that impressed, and he's cautious about playing the upset-mind­ed Tigers this weekend.

Beating the Tigers will give Satian some­thing to feel a little better about.

Michigan State 35, Memphis 13

IOWA STATE AT MINNESOTA The second best game in the conference

DUKE AT NORTlTWESTBRN Minus all-American wide i ewioer DWayne

Bates, Gary Barnett knows his Wildcats &.ren't. a Big 'Tho champion caliber team..

That wa. clearly evident in last weekenkd's 27-20 losll at Wake Forest-

Barnett and Ius Wildcats have gone back to the fundamentals, in bopes of getting Northwestern back on track- For the first time ever as a college coach, Barnett had his team practice in peds on a Monday this week. ~o matter who we play, we have to exe­

cute better or we willlOj3e: he saiei -I don't care who we play."

Relax, Gary, it's Duke. Northwestern 21, Duke 10

BOWLING GREEN AT OHIO STATE It's been two weeks since John Cooper

lashed out at his team for their poor effort in the opener against Wyoming that the Buckeyes won 24-10.

Now his team has surely improved, and built up some chemistry to tear down a smaJler Mid-America Conference opponent.

Watch out Big Ten, tbe Buckeyes are starting to roll.

Ohio State 69, Bowling Green 7

TEMPLE AT PENN STATE Coach Joe Paterno says this 'Thmple team

is the best he's ever seen, but that doesn't mean much.

The Nittany Lions are the top team in the land, and they showed why last week­end in a 34-17 win over Pittsburgh. The Nittany Lions didn't play remotely their best game last weekend, and still managed to win easily. The true sign of a champion.

Paterno was displeased with the run­ning game last weekend, so watch for a big game from tailback Curtis Enis.

Penn State 49, Thmple 17

NOTRE DAME AT PURDUE Former Boilermaker coach Jim Coletta

is now the offensive coordinator under new coach Bob Davie at Notre Dame. Coletta left West Lafayette saying he was burned out and needed a rest, but then jumped right on with the Irish. Go figure.

If Purdue was any good, they could pull some kind of "Let's get the old coach~ type thing, but they are not.

Notre Dame 38, Purdue 10

WISCONSIN AT SAN JOSE STATE The Badgers and Ron Dayne had all the

hype in the world during the preseason, but fell fiat on their face against Syracuse in the Kickoff Classic, and needed a last­second touchdown to beat Boise State last weekend.

With Ron Dayne back and ready to get the Heisman train started again, the Bad­gers will win ... barely.

Wisconsin 21, San Joee State 20 Wayne .Drebs is a UI junior and 01 sports writer.

PI!TE THOMPSONITHE OAJL Y IOWAN

Members of the Iowa band are shown~n lowa'$ $2 million Jumbotron, locat­ed on the north scoreboard at K"tnnick StadiW7L

Hayden Fry: Where's Jumbo? By CHUCK BLOUNT THE DAILY IOWAN "I couldn't hear it or see it.

I'm like an old mule with llinders on. "

c

Th e new Iowa football Jumbotron and scoreboard at Kinnick Stadi­um - the administration had mixed feelings, the players and fans found the re'plays enjoyable,

but the coach has no idea where it is.

Iowa football coach Hayden Fry -

"What do you call that thing? Jumbo?" Hawkeye coach Hayden Fry said. "I didn't even notice Jumbo during the whole game. I don't even know where it's located."

With a colossal 20- by 24-foot viewing screen and a $2 million price tag, Fry may have been the only person in the stadium that didn't have a clue of its existence as "Jumbo" made its debut last Saturday at the Iowa-UN! game.

Although he never had the time to sit back and watch any of his pinpoint pass­es while he was on the field, Iowa quar­terback Matt Sherman liked what he saw out ofthe big screen. He just didn't have much time to enjoy.

"It is kind of nice, to see coverages dur­ing like time-outs, but time really comes into factor when you're on the field," Sher­man said. "We don't really have time to sit back and watch replays while we're on the field, because you spend all your time get­ting ready and calling the n.ext play."

Back-up quarterback Randy Reiners admitted to taking a few extra glances at Jumbo, but said it was only a matter of cir­cumstance (Iowa already up 38-0).

"I think it's pretty cool," Reiners said. "It's a lot more relaxing out there when you're winning like that."

With the ability to instantly flash replays seconds after the blow of the whistle, and the increased bang for the sponsorship buck with audio capabilities, the athletic depart­ment saw the project as a obligatory ingre­dient to improving the football experience at Kinnick.

"We kind of approached it from the per­spective of the fan in row four at the north end zone trying to catch the action of a play in the south end," said Rick Klatt, assis-

tant athletic director in charge of external affairs and overseer of the Jumbo project.

The system has added features that will be on display this Saturday against Tulsa that were inoperative for the UN! game. Features such as updated individual stats, video highlights from games across the country and other graphic visual informa­tion will be available.

Klatt found gratification in the visual benefits to the Jumbo, but was anything but impressed with the audio quality oftbe system. Throughout the game, the audio system seemed to be at an ear-shattering level.

-rb say that we were disappointed wouJd be' a big understatement," Klatt said. "None of it performed at a level that met our expectations. Many timiDg problems came up because as "Df early Saturday morning the project wasn't entirely completed..

"We are kind ofta1ring this at a Learning curve and everything will be better Sat­urday, and there will be even more improve­ment the game after that."

Like the super large screen didn't catch Fry's eyes, his ears didn't pick up OD the loud audio syBtem either. A possible reper­cussion from the lick put OD the Texan in the first quarter.

"Everybody was trying to tell me how loud it was and 8ll that and I couldn't tell.· Fry said. "I couldn't hear it or see. it. rm like an old mule with blinders on."

In the eyes of Fry, the only thing be wanta to know is where he can see who's winning the ballgame.

"Which side the scoreboard's on is all I care about,· Fry said.

Ion 0

fawkeye souvenirs in Iowa

• Sweatshirts • Baseball Hats

• T-Shirts &

• Books on Iowa

IOIVO Book & Supply Downtown Across from the Old Capitol

Open: M - F 9:00 - 8:00. Sat. 10 - 6. Sun. 12 - 5

Sunshine? There's plenty of that in our outdoor beer garden

Sports? Big Screen TV plus 11 other TV's show­ing aN the Great Hawkeye & Spotts Events

Shuttle? Free shuttle To & From AJI Home Hawkeye Football Games Games? 5 Poof Tabfes, 4 Dart machines, & various video garnes. Plus Weekly

r-----!....~~~~~~~~-__" Pool & Dart Leagues

Hungry? Daily Lunch Specials

Happy Hour? Daily from 3pm - to 7pm. Plus Nightly Specials

jj. )1GRIZZl. rSi Music? OJ Playing Your ~ 7. Favorite Music & Live Music

- ... on Various Weekends. "lI- I

, Dance Floor? Brand New THE PlACE TO BE WHEN YOU WANT THE 1000 sq. ft. Dance Floor

BEST OF EVERYTHING - STOP & EXPERIENCE COURTEOUS SERVICE, GREAT FOOD IOWA CITY'S NEWEST

& DRINK SPECIALS & PlENTY OF ACTION PARTY PUB!

ROLEX

SUBMARINER $335000

H£R:I-EEH & STOCKER 10lS.~ lawaOty JEWElERS 3384212

Your ••• HAUOWIIN~ HEADQUAlTEI$

-h'L~lbH-""""" GRAND OPENING Friday, September 12

• Hundreds of Masks • Make-up • Wigs • Stage Blood • Props

y •

I I oJ ••••

F r 19 years. Connie Murray ha. performed an almost daily duty tbat might milk. even the 5trongest. soldier tlee with fear -the \.ask oC preparing menus Cor

Iowa', hungry Hawkeye football team, It's an operation known around the UI

campus under the code name -training table.~

Hllving served players for nearly two decades, Murray has noticed trends in the Big Ten just from observing the playel'S walking through the line.

"They (the players) don't weigh nearly as much nowadays as they used to," she said.

Murray can take some of the credit for the slimmer Hawkeye teams of the 90's.

'"In 1993, Hayden Fry came to me and told me he wanted leaner, meaner and faster players," Murray said. ·So we went to an emphasis of offering more high car­bohydrates, lower fats and proteins."

But Murray says one of the keys ofcre­ating a healthier menu wasn't just chang­ing the food, but rather changing the loca­tion of where the food waS placed.

"One big thing that we did is that we moved the desserts to the dining room," the Cood service manager said. "We used to have a big bowl of ice cream waiting for them when they came through the line, and they were usually starving when they got there and would just fiI] up on that.

"Now they are full before they even see it."

Murray says she was surprised by how well the players adapted to the low-fat menu. Her biggest worry now though isn't count­ing calories but rather keeping players from different regions of the nation happy.

"We really noticed that when the Texas players, for example, started coming that they were requesting different items than what the Iowa playel'S like," Murray said. "They just love country fried steak. They always want that as a choice when we have

Iowa's Jared DeVries is served food at training table Wednesday night at Hi11crest dorm.

regular steak." A popular feature Murray added to the

menu is Senior Plan-A-Meal night held on, Thesdays during the fall. Senjor football players are able to request the entire menu, but according to Murray, there is one catch.

"Things like caviar, lobster and beer are not a choice," the 19-year veteran sajd. "But we have gotten a few requests for minia­ture lobster tails and crab legs and things like that."

Although Murray says training table rotates menus much the same way as reg-· ular dorm food service, there is one differ­ence.

Pregame iDeals never change. ·On Fridays before home games we

always have a small 6 oz. New York strip steak, spagbetti with meat or meatless sauce, Corn on the cob or corn of some sort, broccoli, garlic bread and a dessert," Mur· ray said.

"It's tradition."

"Training table is great. The food is awesome. Right up there with home-cookin'. I'm from Texas you know and we have pretty good meals down there but I guarantee you that Connie and the rest of her staff have done a

real good job of providing us with good nutritious food that we can definitely stay healthy with. It helped me put on weight my freshman year, but now it's helping

me maintain it." Iowa junior Matt Hughes

.V."H ",vl

It tastes even better when it's free.

Wate ,-. VOT e d::c S\O'-ple .

'n'hal a gre:ll inrroduction 10 clean, fresh-tasting watc:r. No", get one month cooler rental and 10 gallons of USF Premium Bon1ed Waxer FREE. We ba"e 5e'feral WlIltt cooler modeb "­

available 10 sui! your needs. In your home or business, you·1I enjoy boIt1ed water from U.S. Filter. ----------------I I

: USF Piemiwn Water Trial Offer I Now get one month cooler rental and 10 gallons of I

delicious USF Premium Bottled Water FREE.

I

I

IUS -,,-~­• .I-li..':. ~M I 337-5773 --- - -- - -

New Customers Only. I Bottle Oeposi l Required. I

With Coupon Only. Exp_ 9130/97 I ------

7-577: Soo S. Gilbert lo'Yll'CI Ci

"I chose Macintosh® because of its reputation as a reliable computer. It's worth its

tin gold!" "My Mac has made my life easier. In the social and academic aspect, I use my Mac for everything from writing programs on the compiler to balancing my checkbook I can take my PowerBook whenever and wherever I go. The Mac is like a dooe of medicine I take everyday - if I don't take my medicine, I would falter.

I learned to use a Mac in a very short amount of time. I don't have to do much except turn it on."

lTniversitv of lo\va l\lacintosh Savings . '-

~ Macirltaih 65001250 J'Uou1'CW3<Y.l2MBRMV;lWIIa<IIJrMYlZ>a>-IOIIZ'i6K-I2Cod..-1ntmo1 PL ~ 1I1'11:.R$300 Rf.Ilo\11:. $1902.75 _15"Avdi;poy$I9j7.50 Prf.M!r Macintosh 65<XV3(Xl _'C&lIc61.·.ullv.w4G811a<11JrMYl2llllY.i12l(·I2~7N -.,.." ~$:mlIDlA'TE$2587.53 ..,llt 15"IIV~ $264.2.28 PcMer Macintosb 44001200 .-.c«!!<Yl&.tB RMI'2W ,tid 1JrMYl2l(]).1O\I$·12 C!d-<I _ WIffi$IOO RflY;m$1342.68 WI 1S"IIVdl!pIay $1597.43 ~ MacinIosh 73IXV200~RAMI2GIltldDMYl2lffi.IOIIZ'i6K.I2a..tc1-_ ::-_-=--:--:-;-:::-::--::c=-"~·rER~R£IlATE$2147.85 ___ WllltlS" AVclJ:;jjay$2302-60 PuwerBook 14<Xks1133 ~!D.lo'l6Mll fWoVIGIJ I tid ~ROWI2IIIC·12 CdleIII5 ~

;---=-;-:::~--;:-:-:,.--__________ ArnR$lOO_1E$I,733.93 Color StyIeWriter4100 III-TERJ'jIIIDlA'TE $166.08 Color &yIeWriter 4500 <. , ""'rERi'iOREom $256.38 Color StYfeWriter 6500 Wll'.Ri'iORE&.·!E $374.63

BII)I." Apple dcskIop $)'lCl1I or WI Apple _.".,.11 ."d....., up "'"llddlllon,,1 $:100 wj""'}O!1 Purdl:<;c anApple""lJIll*'rfrlxll}O!"CIIDplI'll\.-dlerbel''''ccn)uly 12andOClober 10. 1997 ~m.lJ ';l m-.)

A.~ e,l~y ,l~ 1, 2, 3! Step 1: Call Information Thchnology Services

31335-5454 for more information

Step 2: Place your order 31lnformation Thclmology Services, 107 S. Undquist Center.

Step 3: Get the power to be your best 31 Iowa!

ThIs oIl:r M _10 U <II >IUd<nb, facuII¥:Uf and dqlanments. _ • • __ rl_eou_"", ""' ............ __ .....

. . . .... ......;..

~ = , -- •. ~ ~. ~j ~~ 1.0 :

Lan-Phuong Bui .

~~sdenre

.... T __

--.­...,,_. r-_ ......... -­.... ---. -

T_ COl OW

'" ... I» .. ~ .. J6I IA so WI oM a& _ &0

"aern. 'fllIeIQA.Me T_ a .... ~ flU .... --- '" .. -- ..... 0..__ os GR 0-."__ P$ so 0rcNId "~.. . WI SA ~_ It. .-. T.., AlWIIII. _ ~ __

L.-~ .... 50 ___ .ps JII JW._ T __ .... _­-....,. TUlUA~> c:::P*- F...,. . -­~--­_1Mn Demonoaan... INTERCEP'n)HS Tong_ . . ...... EJomo ... A. WII\fIeId __ _ KVWWI~ -----." PIN AIQrw --. TanqP~ o.on-o Thoma.

PUNT A£TUANS TIfJI Owtght. •. _ SedrIck If'WI •. Gari ScoU. •. """Majoy " ... DIMa_ ... V Suthe<1ond . Brion ......., Ch,. Chambers. Tutu AtweI ... Chris Eberty •••

T_ a IA SA PU SA os 10 MN SR PS 10 It. Sf'. '''1 so IN so Io<S SO IA SA

T_ a IA SO IN SA os JA IN SA os JA PS lOA IA SA MS SO IA so MiS JR

T_ IA MS MS IL os PU NU WI loiN PS

a SA SO so JR SO FR SA FA SR JA

KlCKOFF RETURNS CllafieF_ ..

T_ a PS SO

Tutu AtweI. ••• - ..... .. LN Johnoon .. . Glynn Johnoon .. --. "-ron BuJreU ••

PUNTING AusM Wheatley Bt8ndon Kaser . Pal Pidgeon... .. Steve Kemph .... B. Banhdomew. Tim Hughes.._ Alan Sutkowsld. KIMn Stemk • ... Ryan RIndeIt ..• Ryan Tat)k)tL

FIELD GOALS Brian Gowfns ..• Travils Forney .. MdyPoyne .... Zac:h Ekomen._ Dan SWItL •••• Adam BolIoy .... CMa GanIner. Neil Racl(ers .•. MatlOevenport..

SCOfUNG TIMan Banks ••• Cunis EnIo .... Zach 8fomer1 .. . Travis Forney .. Brian Gowlns __ Ed Watson.._ ... 1oIcIlonaJd·_ CMaGaro.-.. S. Ernsberger •. SOan AlIOfd. ••

TACkLES Bony """'""' .. Eric Colier ... MIke Nelson .... KevIn Bud<. .... Ge<aJd Ccnowoy. John FavreL .. Casey Daiey ... LN 8ru&I1 ...... OO";OL ......... Don HoImes._ •• A. WlnfieId.... •• Pare Williams .. Michael vouno.. lalolar~. Jerry fWdzJnsId T.....,.c:a-. -Thomooon

MN SR os so P\J JR IN FA WI so NU JA

Toom IA PU PS MN os NU IN WI MN IL

T_ NU PS IN IA OS loiN loiS IL WI

T ..... IA PS IA PS NU PU IL loiS MS PU

T ..... NU NU NU NU NU WI NU PU WI NU OS MN IL WI OS MN WI

CI so JA SO SO JR SR SR FR so SR

a SR FA FR JR SO JR SR so JR

CI SR JR JA FR SA SR JR SA JR SR

a SR SR SR JA JR FA SR SR SR SR JR JR FR SR SR so so

1.#'~6L~ __ J. .....

• , , , , 1 .r , I a • o 1 t

• , , 2

Q

Q

• •

Q

• • • I

• • 2 2 1 1

Q

• I

• • • 2 2

Q

1

• I

• 1 2 1 2 1 1

G 2

• I 1

• 1 1 1 2

G 1 1 1 1 2

• 1 1

• 1

G 2 2 2 2 2 2 2

• 2 2 , 1 1 2 1

• 2. . -. ... -

- -4

:os '2 4l .. » 43 12. - ..-. '0 _

,4 1,a 7 t. · .. :1 eo ,0 '. · ~ • 152 5 5' 2 .. - ..... - . o _

121 0 o 52 o 10 91 32 1()& '4 120 ·3 ... . o 110

In! yeta 2 •

• o •• o o o o o 2

- yo. 2 2. 2 •• 2 •• 3 . 7

• '6 2 • · , 3 • 2 • 2. 0

- yo. 2 4'

• 92 2 43 ~ 57 3 57 8 .118

• 7. ..- VCIo 3 t:.e • '84 • 227 3 .35 8 395 13 570

• 26. .2 520

• 255 8 328

FG FGA 5 5 2 2 2 2 1 I 1 2 1 2 o 1 o 1 o 1

TO XPT 3 0 2 0 a 8 a • a 3

• 2 • 0 a • • 0 1 0

U" A 17 12 '2 9

• 12 7 7 9 3 10 2 9 3 8 3

• 3 6 5

• 3 9 2 5 • • • • 2 7 3 , 3

.~""~.#J"~

.. .. 4$ \0

TV • , t • o o 1 o o 1

"' o o o I o 1) .. o I. o

TO o o o o o o o o o o

TO o o o o o o o o o o

TO o o o o o o o A"II " .0 " .0 45." 45.0 43.9 43.8 43.5 43.3 <2.5 410

Pet. 100.0 1000 100.0 100.0 50.0 50.0 0 .• • . 0 0.0

Fa o a 1 2 5 o o o o o T_ 29 2' 1. 1. 12 .2 12 .. .. 11 11 .. .. .0 .0 .0 .0

-• • • • It • • .r • • T_

I • .N "~I '50

"" ~ ,2., .. ~ ."'$ n .. .1< 20' ... '28 'ss '3.0 .CU 240

~ o o 43 11:1

'7 o o o o o

InIIO 2.00

• 00 100

• 00 • 00 100 ' .00 100 '.00 ' 00

..... '05 9 .0 7 .0 6 7 3.2 2.0 18 ' .3 0.5 0.0

A"II 23.5 23.0 21~ 190 19.0 18.7 17.8

FG/G 2.50 2.00 2.00 ' .00 1.00 1.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 ... I. 12 11 10 18

• • • • • -o o o o a 2

• • 3 o o a o o 1 o o

-lIftIO _. a.. _ .. 'N. "" ~57..o .... .211.5 12, •

T_ _0 1100 ..... •• .cI.II .0 820 520 51.11 ".II yo. _

= ':: 1a. . HMO 14$ 145..0 127 127.0 .23 123.0 \1. 1180 '17 117.0 115 1150 110 110.0

PIWG 18.0 12.0 11 .0 10.0 9 .0 • . 0 • . 0 • . 0 • . 0 • . 0

STArPA.

I :z I l I I J J I r 1-0 1.0 1.0 .1).4

1..0 1..0

III 11

HI Sl7 1-0 S27 1..0 4Q2 1-0 377 1-0 lOS 1..0 11l 0-1 182 1-0 ISO

1

'. I I II II I) ,. IS 16 17 20 18 21 25

23

25 .CoIoradoSt I-I 127 24 0tII~ rec.eMng '!lifts : Telas Mo." liS. It CarolIna

St 113. Brigbam Youn, 75. WestVllimia 74, Wash­IIICOII Sf. 64, Southern MIss.. 26, Georgia 25, Wa FlWst 11. South Carolina 10, MISSissippi St 6, HortJI... western 5. Vllilma 4. Wyoming 3 .. Air Forte 2, Georgia Tech 2, Oregon 2, utah St 2. AI1Iansas L Hawaii I. San Diego St 1.

RaCt' jOr tile .................

HEIS Last weeks top performers in college tootba/l. a-z.... West Vi rginia, rushed for a career-

high 199 yards and two scores in a 24-17 win over Easl Carolina.

T __ IIIIIIb. Iowa, ran for a career-best 203 yards and two long touchdowns and caught one of Malt Sherman's three scoring passes to lead the Hawkeyes to a 66-0 victory over Northern Iowa.

'[ It ........ washington, rushed for 171 yards and a touchdown and caught a pass lor a score as the Huskies routed BYU 42-20.

-'1IcQ ••• I. Penn State. threw for a school­record 366 yards and two touchdowns in a 34-17 win over Pittsburgh.

You might be a Hawkeye fan if . . , __ . you own a pair of black and gold striped over­alls and have worn them in public_ __. even your bathroom is decorated in black and gold_ ... you regularly go to La Casa in hopes th.at Hay­den Fry will be there. ___ you bought a black and gold sombrero on your trip to San Antonio last season without even think­ing of the fact that you would never wear it.. _ __ . you keep soda bottles just because they h.ave a Hawkeye emblem printed on them. __ . you display those bottles like they are trophies_ ... instead of buying a backboard for your drive­way basketball hoop. you bought a big piece of wood and painted a tiger hawk on it. __ . the spare tire cover on the hack of your vehi­cles has a tiger hawk on it. __ . you own a Hayden Fry life-size. stand up cut out. . __ you kept season tickets through 19 years with­out a winning season. __ . you think reciting former Hawkeye line-ups is a coo] party trick.

s.., 1IKt. Temple, ran for 126 yards in 16 carries including a game-winning 26-yard touchdown with

... your toilet seat sings the Hawkeye fight song when you flush. __ . you keep weekly tabs on whether Hayden Fry has the mustache or doesn't have the mustache_ __ . your fantasy is to party with Jim Zabel.

1 :25 remaining in the Owls' 28-21 win over Boslon College.

............ , Marshall, caught live passes for 186 yards. including touchdowns of 90 and 79 yards as Ihe Thundering Herd upset Army 35-25.

__ . you have Hayden Fry's accent down perfect.

How SOBER WERE YOU AT

THEUNI GAME?

We name an event and you say it il happened in Saturday's game or not. -Henry Pollio scored on a two-yard run. -Four members of the butt· naked posse scored a touchdown. ·lim Dwight dropped a pass.

. __ you saw Tm Cup 206 times. just because they mention Odessa. Thxas. hometown of Hayden Fry.

1997 IOWA FOOTBALL 8TATs AUStWOG T......., BanIcs

DooIJ­"""n-. T..-_ -­..... SIlo<mon ---..y Pollio T_ ()ppor.u

PASSING ..... SIlo<mon -­T_ ()ppor.u 11£ __

Damon Giboor> --~~ _ca.... cn ... _ T ..... _

.... Vdo ,. 203 .0 53

5 •• 2 38 4 26 • .2

.... 3 • • 2

47 379 32 511

.... e-. I. 9

7 5 •• 23

19-41 17'9

"" 11.3 5.3 8.2

19.0 U 3.0 '.3 2.0 8. ' 1 .•

TO 2 o 1 o o o o • 4 o

V* InlTO '147 0 3 112 0 2 275 0 5

• 0

No Yde ""II TO " 110 27.5 1 3 4&0 13..3 1 2 42 21 .0 .. 1 1 40 -4<1 .Q 0 1 27 27.0 1 1 '10 10.0 0 1 6 8.0 1

PUNT~ romOwight TonyColins Joe SIol*y T_ ()ppor.u

...-r~I.uRa

Tarig Homan

PIoz """"* T-ngP.-son T_ ()ppor.u

No Ydo 2 2. I 14 , • o

• 39 o

A"II ~ W.5 0 14A 0

U 0

" 0 ~ 0

"; y~ A;! ~ 1 0 0.0 0 1 0 0.0 0 " 8 1.5 0 o 0 0.0 0

IIICIC~ No Aio::hIwd c.n.r 1

yo. _ 11)

34 34.0 0 T_ 1 34 34.0 0 ()ppor.u 11 _ 24.5 a

-...0 ----T-' ()ppor.u

-.0-" Zac:II_

100 Ydo ""11"-3 138 _0 58 3 138 48.0 58 8 223 :¥12 .te -- -- "­'1/1 100.0 40

_ UT AT TT Tf'L _ T__ . 0 . t).O t).O

PIu AIdna • 1 5 1-5 0-0 Ed GitIean • '1 I 0-0 0-0 ep.ne..~" 1 5 2--7 14 Jon l.aAIur 4 1 .5 204 a-o ScaIr YCIICW 3 2 5 1·11 1·11 MIll ttustt- 2 3 ~ 0-0 a-o Coley _ O. 4 t).O t).O

Joe ~ • 3 • t).O t).O Ene: ~ 3" t).O t).O "-y c-. t 3 4 t).O t).O Tang........ 4 0 • '·1 0-0 MMl ao..n 3 1 " 1-3 a-o ~ Ho&we 2 1 3 0-0 a-o SIiwe EngIiIh 3 0 3 2-4 0-0 JInd o.v,.. 2 1 3 0-0 0-0 Vernon Fk6w, 2 1 3. o-G 0-0 R!oon _ 2' ~ t).O t).O ....,_ , 2 3 0-0 t).O

/von toeIn 2 0 2 0-0 0-0 J .P. UngIt 2 0 2 0-0 a-o JefI~ 2 0 2 0-0 a-o TMq ".,., " 2 0-0 0-0 1)n 0wighI " 2 0-0 o-G

I

·Dwight dropped Hayden Fry.

THEY All HAPPENED! DooIJ­T_ ()ppor.u

1 4 4 .0 0 14 271 1&.& 5 19 17'9 8.4 0

AajClllrtl; '1 2 0-0 0-0 . Cory _ 0 2 2 0-0 t).O I

.. ~, z.!! . .. ~ • ...!' .. '!..~~ ..... . . - ~ ~ _ ~ . ... ~.~ ~ .. . '! ... ~ =~~~:-ono~~7 ___ ~+_ .

JI

ti9y our All-U-Can .~

.Breakfast Buffet

$699

watcp the game on our _~ IS·~ 100" Big Screen or

~'- -. -,

one of our 10 lV's.

Visit GA. Malone's, yOUT sports restaurantlbar. GA. MaJone~s . . The uptown thing to do.

At 'Falbo' 5, we wash our, hands after handling

the sausaae.

230 KIRKWOOD AVE. (Corner Kirk-ood & Gilbert) --------~..---------

$650

You're invited to experience Chef Michael's new Fall menu

• FAMOUS AIRLINER PIZZA • CHICAGO-STYLE DEEP-DISH • AIRLINER-STYLE MEDIUM THICK • NEW YORK-STYLE THIN

FREE DELIVERY QUESADILLAS. BAKED BRIE. BEER-BATTER

CHICKEN. BAKED PREIZELS • MOZZARELLA STICKS • BREADSTICKS • STUFFED MUSHROOMS

• BUFFALO WINGS. FRENCH ONION SOUP • TORTELLINI PASTA. SP AGI1ETTI • BROCCOLI & BOW TIES • PAELLA , • WISCONSIN TUNA CAKES • CAJUN CHICKEN • BL T

STIRFRY. GRILLED TUNA • OMELETTES • CLUB SANDWICH • SALAD NICOISE • FRESH BURGERS •

CHICKEN LlNGUINE • SEAFOOD FETTUCINE • MEATLOAF .1WICE-BAKED POTATO. FRESH FRUIT. GRILLED

TENDERLOIN. STEAK SANDWICH. VEGETARIAN PHILLY

• REUBEN • FILET MIGNON • SWORDFISH • IOWA PORK CHOP. PANKO CHICKEN. SALMON FILLET· LASAGNE

• MAN[COlTI • AND MORE! AL\'C\YS (,I{E.H DRJ:\K SP[U.lLS • . ~E\T:R;\ con:R

AIll,·riLm !."prc". \1.,'ILT( .ln l. , -,,,_\ ,\ ')i" , l\l'r .\lle-pln' • ~~ '" Hllh (:Iini< In

HI\THlrST ·· BLST 1'11./X \\T\:\U{ US!:' YL\!{S .\:\[) "BLST m ·f{CFlf"

After tearing his anterior cruciate ligament two years

ago, Tang Holman returned to the Hawkeye lineup Saturday

in grand fashion.

By WAYNE DREHS THE DAIL.Y IOWAN

'TI0 interceptioDs are not what arig Holman will remember

most about his first college foot­ball game, which came against Northern. Iowa last Saturday.

That piece of memory instead will con­tain the opening kickoff.

It was that play that marked the return of Holman, an all-state defensive back in high school, to -the game of foot­ball. A game he hadn't played since the final down in the New Jersey High School Champi­onship in 1994.

Holman redshirt­ed his freshman year in 1995, and tore his anterior cruciate lig­ament toward the end ofthe year. Last season, scar tissue from the reconstruc­tive surgery forced him to have the knee scoped a second time, and he missed the entire season.

"It was just a great feel-

ingto be out theremak­ing plays. I can't put it into words. And all the hard work I

went through to

get back made it even moregrati­

fying." But Saturday, the injury wasn't on Hol­man's mind - UNI Iowa cornerback was .. An~ on that Tana Holman operung kickoff, Hol- • man managed to sprint down the field, fight off a few block­ers and make Iowa's first tackle of the 1997 season.

"It was just a greatfeeling to be out there making plays; Holman said. "I can't put 'it into words. And all the hard work I went through to get back made it even more grat­ifying."

The road back wasn't an easy one for Holman, who had used his legs for athlet­ic success all throughout his life. His junior year he was the New Jersey 55-meter hur­dle champion, and his senior year he didn't win the title , but turned in a time of7.32, the state's best mark of the year·

Tarig Holman returns one of his two interceptions against UN! last Saturday.

The guidance of fonner teammate and fellow defensive back 'Ibmmy Knight, who had the same ACL injury occur to him twice, though, made it easier. Knight now starts at cornerback for the St. Louis Car­dinals after being drafted No. 9 in last spring's NFL Draft.

"When it first happened, t'b not be able to walk, it's frustrating and you have your doubts,n Holman said. "But as I saw the progress, I felt I could do it. And you know what 'Ibmmy's doing, and the kind of money he's making now, so I knew it could be done.

"Now I use it as motivation. When I get tired, I think back to last year, when I couldn't even run."

W hile Holman will remember his first playas a Hawkeye,

_ the fans and media are pointing to his two pick-offs in the third quarter as his

top plays in the game. The first one came when UNI quarter­

back Shane Fortney tried to d~p the ball

off after being forced out of the pocket by Anthony Herron. Holman just happened to be in the right place at the right time. His second interception, however, was. a little more impressive.

"They had been running fades all game, and I knew they were going to try to do it again: Holman said. So I just tried to make a play.n

That he did, leaping into the air and snatching the ball away from the intend­ed Panther receiver.

The two picks place Holman first in the Big Ten, and second in the nation in inter­ceptions, as Iowa's second-string corner­back. Senior Plez Atkins, who ranks No. 6 on the Hawkeyes all-time pick list with 10, is the starter.

"It's a weird situation," Holman said. "We were talking about that the other day and joking around. I just see it as trying to take advantage of my opportunities when I get in there.

"Plez and Eddie Gibson Qeft cornerback) have taught m~ a l~t. ~d they've earned

PETE THOMPSONfI1{E DAIl. Y IOWAN

their position so right now I know rm the back-up."

H olman sees his greatest asset on the football field as a com­

. bination of the talents that Atkins and Gibson both p0ss­es.

"I'm the in-between guy," Holman said. "Plez is a good cover corner, and·Ed is a really good tackler, and I feel like I'm in­between those guys. I'm good at both."

And as far as his health, Holman couldn't feel better about how far his knee has come along.

"This has got to be one of the best places to be; Holman said. "The best doctors , a ,huge hospital, a great lifting program. r feel I'm just as good, if not better than I was before.

"And going out and practicing against guys like Ricchard Carter, Damon Gibson, and Tim Dwiglit everyday gives you con­fidence. I know that if I can stop them, I can cover anybody."

You lowe ~ couc;h. r our cotICh Iow:e y0u­

r au ne\I8I" wam to ~'P'couch.

The only reaeon you Jeaveyour

couch ~ to get food, l~, ~ Mike',. , ,

DELIVERS! delici0u6 submarine 5andwiche5 to your

couch (alm~i.)

-,....,.­""_1 .... · .. '..., __ ............. '_. ---. ...,.. '14 Turitey Dill Salaci -_.­,....,. SGooI ...... '" 011,

DieM CoIo<y, Qo;oo _ ....

_ • ...,..., ,,""'I0Il.­_ ....... ,-

, .. _raorytJ .. _'"-'--, .... ~, .... Itipo'--000an _ Our _"""' s.u...

*-

As _ .. AppIe ... 1 5Ioawoo4 ____ doMto,

..... - .... Itipo,-, 1 __ _

.. c fa. 640L Wid! EmoIOal'd

ow WidIout Emnoard

12-12 OL cans

~I

WE HOW DEUVER 8:00-t :OO pm • a31 IMN

_ HWY. 6 & 1 ST. AVE. , CORALVILLE

SSw Dubuque

Best Bloody Mary's in Town! Plush Vinyt Booths!

-] DAYS ONLY

.1· .... 14-12 OL cans • • AA III:!. • "+T.& Emnoard

Oepcat

:eye 220L

S!59

e Reg. & Hickory Smoke Only

'/~. W1IIIECQllocard

~~7"~

i/S6~ eo . "The!!! Name For Value" .D ............. -v. aypaseln CIty • 354-0313 • a.-. 24 AiIUra" Dey - 7 DIIpoA-WMk

__ I • good

......... Sept. 14, 1987

D ,on't. exp.~\ lh~ I. o~a football L.am to play Northern Jowa apln anytime Il0011 M it was, th~ PA!1the.rs ""ere not included on eit1JerofJowa'.

1998 and 1999 schedules 1'hen Iowa trounced UNt, 66-0, in a w~lloping mi.s­match last week at Kinnick St4dium.

Iowa coach Hayden Fry doesJl't want ~ Division I-AA Panthers to endure that kind of torture ever again. ~Other people

schedule the games, but in all fairness to UNI, we obviously have a big advan­tage, ~ Fry said- '"I'be­oreticaUy, a team in that division shouldn't do that well (against a Div. 1 team)."

When VN1 came to Iowa City in 1995, the game was much more competitive . The Panthers actual­ly led, 3-0, early in the game after a blocked punt led to a field goal. 10wa went on to win, 34-13.

Two years later, it was absolutely no contest. Iowa domi­nated every possible aspect of the game, racking up 658 yards of total offense. The Hawkeyes took a 38-° lead into halftime before Iowa's second­and third-string play­ers scored four more touchdowns in the second half.

Mike Dunbar's first game as UNI's head coach was a for­gettable one. Still, Dunbar graciously complimented Iowa's all-around domi­nance. He also attrib­uted the blowout to the talent differen-

looJ\-UNI FftCTS

Iowa leads the senes, 12-1 and has won 12 straight games. '

Northern lotI'a 's only Win

in the sefles came in the only game played in Cedar falls.

Northern loti's received $200,000 for playing the game.

Iowa's 6581'1rds total offense tied fifth on its all-time list.

Iowa played three true fresh men: OT Anthony Herron, ot Ben Sobieski and kicker Chad JohOson.

"I wouldn't really want to play them again. They play hard,

but we've got thenum berson them"

Iowa football coach Hayden

Fry

tial, rather than the Hawkeyes padding their stats.

"That score got out-of-hand because of us, not because of them," Dunbar said.

"1 wouldn't really want to play them again," Fry said. ur told Coach Dunbar I don't think it's fair. They play hard, but we've got the numbers on them."

Division I teams are allowed to carry 85 scholarship players, while I-AA schools are given 63.

Iowa players expressed mixed emotions about the game. The lopsided game allowed Fry to play nearly all of his players, but did not give Iowa totally realistic game experi~nce.

.: :;;; ':.. '"- ~ . ... ~-~-~- '-.- '-~ ...:- . - ' .....

IOWA'S LARGEST MARGINS

Opponent YUr Scorl -Cae 1908 92-0 __ ~- _-=- - ~~ ~ fOflo-a~~ .. ~ .. .;I-~ --

-

Cornell 1904 88-0 -,.....-~~, • < •

Des Moines 1905 72-0 ~::--:--_~""l . -Grinnell 1904 69.a ~- .. -~~~~

-~;:;. - )' -

Northern Iowa 11S7 &6-8

"UNI helped the secondary out a lot, it exposed us to a lot of passes: safety Ker­ry Cooks said. "But the speed of the game is going to be a lot different (in future games)."

Quarterback Matt Sherman, who had three touchdown passes, took an extend­ed rest for most of the second half as back­up Randy Reiners saw his first action as a Hawkeye.

urt was a game where you can still gain some confidence, which our guys did," Sher­man said. ur don't know if an Arizona pre­pares you better or a VN1. As a player, it's fun because you get a lot of guys in the game."

Iowa defeated Arizona, 21-20, in last year's season opener.

Playing a I-AA team made it difficult to determine how good the Hawkeyes will be this season. But one player, running back

"

Above: Iowa senior wide receiver Tim Dwight leaps to make a wide­open catch in the end zone against UNl Sept. 6.

(pEn: THOMPSON)

Right: Junior tight end Chris Knipper looks downfield after making a catch against the Pan­thers.

(KIM SD..8ERN1K)

Tavian Ranks, made a legitimate state­ment about his level of talent.

Banks completely overwhelmed the Pan­thers with hill cutting, slashing running style. The Bettendorf native ran for 203 yards and two touchdowns in just three quarters.

After the game, many Iowa fans changed their minds about the Heisman Trophy race, placing their hopes on Banks instead of all-everything Tim Dwight.

urt was only UN!," Banks said. "You don't really become a Heisman candidate after that."

With the mercury steadilyriaing from a kickoff temperature of 82 degree8, both teams were forced to deal with debydra-· tion. Five Iowa players e~rienced l~ cramps, including star defenaiv~ ta&1e Jared DeVries.

De Vries was brought off the field on a gurney during the game. Be was ordered by doctors to drink 167 ounces offtuids per day and expec:ta to be at 100 pezqnt for Saturday's game against 'lUlsa. -

The Hawkeyes' only major injury ottM. day was to backup tight end Jed Dull, who suffered a high ankle IIprain.

.. * .... 6.4.~

,.. ... \ ~~ . "---.. - ,

'5 • •

with'lbe Daily Io~ Hawkeye Postgame on the Web

Visit our site after the game

hltp://www.uiowo.edu/-dlyiowon/postgome

The DailV Iowan·s

HAWKEYE rosrGAME ON THE WEB

• BLACK • CORDOVAN

be comfortable. uncompromise:' start with your feet. A happy union between business looks and the Rockport- comfort

heritage, the oresSports-Stfike an elusive balance: refined but relaxed .

Visit us to try on a pair , and be prepared to get comfortable.

~ (&~?I{ __ "S~ ~ FOUR FLOORS • DOWNTOWN IOWA CITY· 337-3345 Mon., Thur. 9-9; Tues., Wed., FrI., Sat. 9-5; Sun. 12-4 0"' n"IIocJ.,.fI COfIIPIOY, lac All/111M' "-vtf ROCKPOIIT ... OIIlSSPOIITS II. 1IOIIIIIt1IlJ_'~$

JOG UHCOWPROWISf IS. 1' ...... 1 01 TIle RotkpOli c ....... , I ..

ON GAME DAY-AVOID THE TRAFFIC

ALL BUSES ARRIVE & DEPART DO,WNTOWN IOWA CITY

..

Ii"

00

co Without namintf name., Fry aid three

guY" in particular didn'" know h.ow to get off the bJacken or dJdn't aqueeu to the football, but that was due to inexperience. The kickoff coverage team gave up 269 yarda on 11 !deb.

The !dckoff coverage isn't the only con· oernll Fry bu. There are quewoo marks as to who will punt, kickoff and attempt long field goals.

MOw- whole formula is to try to get guys as much experience as we can in prepara· tion for the Big Ten." Fry said. "We want to get to the point wet:e everybody feels comfortable with what they are doUig."

The reasons for the concerns are because of the Jack of action. Due to the rout, the Hawkeyes had few opportunity to practice special teams. Iowa only punted three times, attempted one field goal and received one kickoff.

Austin Wheatley will continue to do the

dutie8 for Hawkeye8.

"We1J keep giving two guy the opportu· nity in hopes to have eveJything eettled by the Big Ten; Fry said. "If the kickoff guy isn't doing a good job, well get someone else. Until we estab­liBh some consisten·

lOnf all . pie. kickers

and punters simplyli.\ in a differ­entworid mentally. You don't dare fool

with their mind."

Hayden Fry on a kickers mindsel

cy, that is what we are going to do.» . Zach Bromert has the short field goals

and PAT job wrapped up. He has made 79-of·81 PATs, including 33 straight, but longer field goals are something different. His 4O-yarder against UN! was the longest

- " PEn: nIOMPSONII1tE DAILY IOWAN

Io~ iwiio~ Zach Bromert hits one of his eight point after touchdown fitt~~~against Northern Iowa.

o~. . Johnson. "l 'IviB ~ 8weatin' that 40 yard kick, "Flip a coin between McLaughlin and

srld-l ~e he had t!o grunt to get it over Johnson, both have real strong ]egs but ~ crossbar.- Ji\y said. . aren't as accurate as Bromert," Fry said.

Bromert hasn't really been tested yet, Fry said he doesn't tell his kickers much, but in a: long-range situation Fry said even when wind direction ch.anges, because Bromert would get the call - depending he hates to disrupt their routine. on how he W88 hitting in pregame warm- "Of all people, kickers and punters sim-ups and also the wind factor. ply live in a different world mentally," Fry

Behind Bromert are McLaughlin and said. "You don't dare fool with their mind."

Tulsa looks to repeat last season's upset Golden Hurricane return several skiUed

players who helped knock off the Hawkeyes By ANDy HAMILTON T~E DAILY IOWAN

D ave Rader knows Thlsa football as well as anyone.

He played high school football in the city and then moved to become the quarterback for the

Golden Hurricane. Now in his 10th year as the Tulsa head coach, Rader knew the significance oflast season's 27·20 win over Iowa.

1996 RESULTS

l at SMU. 10-17 l at OI<lahoma State. 9-30 W Iowa, 27-20 W at Oklahoma, 31-24 W Colorado State, 20-14 l BVU, 30·55 l at Utah, 19-45 l New Mexico, 23·34 L TCU, 24-31 W at UTEP, 38-21 l at Rice, 14-42

1997 ScHEWLE

L at Cincinnati, 24-34 Sept, 13, at Iowa Sept."20, Missouri Oct. 4, Rice Oct. 11. UTEY Oct. 18. at TeU Oct. 25, at Colorado Stare Nov. 1, utah _ Nov. 8, at BYU Nov. 15, SMt! Nov. 22, at New Mexico

"I knew how good a football team it was that we beat last year," Rader said. "There is a lot more evenness in college football today, that's what helps make a Tulsa beat a team like Iowa." another touchdown pass the rest- of the sea·

The Hawkeyes came into the game son, but he gained the 'respect of the ranked No. 18, but back-up quarterback Hawkeyes after his brilliant periormadce. John Fitzgerald picked the Iowa secondary "Boy, he's got an arm," Iowa defensive apart for 357 yards ·on 22·of-37 passing, ~ tackle Jared DeVries said. "He can Bing it the only 300-yard performance allowed by on the run. He's got pinpoint accuracy. He's Iowa all season. good."

"We weren't really that poor," Iowa coach Fitzgerald wasn't as successful in the Hayden Fry said. "Those people played Golden Hurricane's season opening 34-24 extremely well last year. As you saw, we loss at Cincinnati. He completed 18'of-40 went on to develop a very fine defensive passes for 277 yards, but he got very little ballclub.Wbat they did before or after, we're support from the running game, wroch not responsible for." accounted for just 88 yards.

"Fitzgerald season wasn't the same after While the Tulsa offense couldn't move the Hawkeyes left town. He failed to throw the ball on the ground, the Golden Hurri-

cane defense allowed 362 yards rushing against the Bearcats.

that total with his 27 -tackle performance against Cincinnati. Strong safety Adonis Peil chipped in with 13. One of Rader's biggest concerns against

Iowa is stopping the Hawkeye rushing attack, which tallied 379 yards in its sea­son opener against Northern 10w.8.

The Hawkeyes big win over the Panthers and Tulsa's ]088 might not be a good omen for Iowa. Last year Tulsa went into the

Iowa game with an 0-Tailback Tavian Banks led the

Hawkeyes and now leads the nation with 203 yards rushing and his succesa has drawn an intriguing compar· ison from the Tulsa head coach.

"It's hard to believe,

"It kind of reminds me of 2 record after losing to SMU and Okla·

Oklahoma State a few homa State and Iowa , entered the game 2-0.

years back. Everybody "They've got the main people that

was glad that Thurman defeated us last year

Tb ' til returning,· Fry said. omas was gone, un "Tulsa usually plays

but Iowa is llroba~ly tbev pl.aved against Barry its best two or three better at · runmng __ 'J '.J games of the year back," Rader said. "L Sanders." after being defeated. think e the styleS" They've got a great between.Sedrick Shaw:, ,~ Tulsa coach Dave Rader on tradition of bouncing and TaVlan Banks ~ S d . k Sh d ~ . B k back.· the same, butBanb is e Me aw an .avlan an S Fitzgerald isn't the faster . It kin-d of only player returning reminds me of Oklahoma State a few years that played a big role in Tulsa's win over back. Everybody: was glad. that Thurman the Hawkeyes. Thomas was gone, until they played Running back Reggie Williams rushed against Barry Sanders. It's a very similar for 106 yards on 24 carries and a touch­situation with Shaw graduating and now down. Williams is not listed in the Tulsa Banks stepping in." two-deep this week after only carrying the

Tulsa's defense is led by senior Levi ball once for no gain against Cincinnati. Gillen, the team's leading reiurning tack- Receivers Wes Caswell and Damon Sav­ler with 102 laste season. That probably age combined to catch seven passes for 221 isn't a stat defensive coordinator Pat Hen- yards and a touchdown against Iowa. derson would like to see out ofhiB free safe- Caswell injured his knee in the first ty. quarter against Cincinnati and is Listed 88

Gillen is well on his way to surpassing questionable against the Hawkeyes.

on .J: 00 5!' .J:C")xS !?tD •• !

i!f~ -

IOWA HAW'EYES 110 ....... I. Alae Rodopoulos 2. Tarig Holman 3. John David Weber 3. Kahlil Hill 4. lticcIIanI Carter 4. K,Ie McCann 5. BashirYamini 6. lim Dwicht 6. Ryan Barton 7. lach Shay 7. Jason Baker 8. Alildrel Brown 9. Matt Bowen

10. Shane Hall 10. Jamie Stahulak 11. Joe Slattery 12. Matt Shemlan 12. lesse~ 13. Randy Reinen 13. U . Wise 14. R-tan Hansen 15. Kerry Cooks 16. I\oIy Hauser 11. Scott Mullen 11. Kurt tIiI!Iz 18. Damon Gibsan 19. .III! Kramer ZO. Matt Slodldale 21. Eric ThilJlM 21. Greg Mclaughlin 22. Tavian Banks 23. Plez Atkins 23. Frank Meier 25. Richard Willock 26. EdGibsan 26. Kit ~rlCUnf 27. RabbIrttD Ricllllds 28 . ..... House 29. Dout tiller 30. Roger Me,er 31. Rob Thein 32. Jeff Clarl<. 33. J.P. lange 34. Carlos HonOfe 3!i. T..-BaIIers 36. Codr 0'HaIe 31. MItt KIIaMs 38. ZICII "'-1 39. IIiM Dalual 40. Paul Moten 41. Jeff Buch 42. Tariq Peterson 42. Robbie Crockett 4l Tony Stralikopoulos 44 . l'.aiClarl<.

PO$. Nt 'IIR 6-3 DB 6-0 WR 6-1 WR 6-3 WR 6-0 QB 6-5 WI! 6-4 WI! 5-9 DB 6-1 DB 6-0 PIPK 6-1 DB 5-10 DB 6-3 DB 6-0 DB 6-1 DB 6-0 QB 6-3 DB 6-1 QB 6-3 DB 5-10 DB 6-2 08 6..(l QB 6-5 OB 6-6 PII ' 6-3 WI! 5-9 DE 6-3 DB 5-11 De 6-t PI! 5-10 RB 5-11 DB 6-0 WI! 6-0 WR 6-2 DB 5-10 P 6-0 DB 6-0 DE 6-3 R8 5-11 LB 6-3 RB 6-0 RB 5-11 DB 6-1 RB 5-1! fl &-\ lJIII)f ~ 1I 6-3 PII 5-10 LB 6-3 DE 6-4 DB 6-1 DE 6-3 RB 6-0 LB 6-1 LB 6-1.

WI. 200 180 190 185 185 180 180 185 170 185 182 175 190 180 185 180 1.10 190 200 175 195 200 215 190 210 180 235 183 195 190 195 180 190 195 \80 205 180 235 190 235 230 210 180 180 2.0 200 241 175 22!i 220 200 230 200 225 1.45

Yr. So. So. Fr. Fr. s.: FL So. Sr. Fr. Jr. Fr. Fr. So. Fr. Fr. So. St. So. So. So. Fe. Sr. Jr. Fr. So. St. Jr. fro Jr. Fr. Sr. Sr. So. Sr. St. Fr. Fr. Sr. So. Fr. So. Jr. Sr. Fr. iii. Fr_ Jr. Jr. Fe. So. Fr. So. Fr. Sr. So.

45. Henry Pollio 46. Ladell Betts 47. Bart Pal ... 48. R-tan Loftin 49. Jett M:Cradren SO. Scott Pospisil 51. Aaron Tecklenburg 52. Steve English 53. Travis Senten 53. Jason Simon 54. Bnlndon "'-sa 55. .Ian lafleur 56. Veman Rollins 57. Keith Rilbup 58. Jared IIefkhoft 59. Scott Yoder 59. Jason TriefWeiler 60. John Wilder 63. Jay Bickford ' 64. D.erek Rose 64. Josh Nelson 66. Caly8em 67. Chad Deal 68. le!emy IIIcIIinney 69. Sh.lor I'Ilor 70. Justin Craun 70. Jason Indestad 72. Epenesa Epenesa 72. Josh Burr 73. Paul Sturgill 74. AIonmCunni"-" 74. Brian IIeIt 75. Christaph Trappe 76. Matt Reischl 1l. 'JoeI Wats..th 78. Billy Brann 79. Mike Goff 81. Chris Knipper 82. Jed Dull 83. Kyle lrippeer 84. MItt MaItIwIy

' 85. MidIIeI Buqer 86. Austin WI..u., 87. KMa~ sa. lofty Collins 89. R-tan \IAcConnic\o. 90. Amn Kle;n 92. Ben Sobieski 93. Skip Miller 94. Jared DeVries 95. [van Wardell 9S_ _ SllliIh 96. Corey IIlM1 91. le'IIrw... 98. EdSliUt 9'1. AnthaIIr ...

fl R8 DE DE t8 OL LB Dl LB OL LB 01.. LB 01. Ol LB OL Dl Dl OL DE 01.. 01. 01. 01. OL Ol Dl Ol Ol 01. DI. 01. 01. 01. Ol Ol Ol TE TE TE f1I ~ WI! WIt it Ol Ol DE DL Dl TE DI. DE III DI.

6-2 5-11 6-2 ~ 6-2 6-4 6-3 6-2 6-3 6-3 6-4 6-3 6-3 6-5 &-6 6-2 6-2 6-2 6-4 6-4 6-1 6-3 6-5 &-6 ~ 6-6 6-5 6-3 6-7 6-10 &-4 6-2 6-5 6-5 &-6 6-4 6-6 6-5 6-3 6-5 ~ &-3 6-5 6-1 6-0 6-3 6-4 6-6 6-4 0-4 6-4 6-!i 6-2 &-3 6-7 6-S

230 200 220 235 Z20 250 235 265 225 270 240 2I!(J 242 300 275 235 265 265 265 275 2.0 285 285 295 280 285 245 265 285 310 260 255 285 290 2I!(J 280 290 275 235 240 2.0 235 245 190 115 245 280 285 240 265 250 m 210 225 265 2!i5

~ ~ k So. ~ ~ ~ k So. k k Sr. k Sr. k & k k So: k ~ ~ k & So. ~ ~ Sr. k ~ ~ ~ k k k ~ Sr. k So. k k k k k ~. ~. k ~ k k k k k k k k '

Yaralpn-. 362.0

Y,,*,...., 131.0

Receh.1 Adramp

ffensive Lin AdYantap

- -Rush Defense

AdYantal' .Pass Defense

Advantale

,..".., S9.0

Y~1790

MyrIck: 48_4 ydsipunt Aaderson: VI FG

Kickers Advantage

WheItIey: 46.0 ydSlpunt Ir-.t: VI FG

anus: 3.3 ydslpunt I.coby: 19.7 ydsIKO Returners

Advantage

~ Dwf&Id.: lO.S ydslpunt ~ Carter: 34.0 ydsIKO

IOWA NOTES

DneR.der 10th year 42-59-l

Coaches Advantage •

H""." Fry 36th year 223-165-10

High temperature took toll on DeVries vs. UNI

I owa football fans walking , around with sunburnt faces

weren't the only victims of the unusually warm September afternoon when the

Hawkeyes took on Northern Iowa last Saturday. -

Junior Jared DeVries, the Hawkeyes' starting defensive tack­le, had to leave the game when his entire body started to cramp up.

DeVries, Whd finished the game with just three tackles, said he cramped in his quadriceps, his ham­strings, his calves, his triceps, his chest, his ribs-and even his fingers.

"It was the most painful thing I ever went through," he said. "My leg was so tight the nurse couldn't even push it down."

DeVries said he concentrated on drinking plenty of fluids all week, but may have forgotten to contin­ue that when the game started. He said he got his body hydrated after the game and will concentrate on keeping hydrated.

"I got some IV's in me and drank three and a half gallons or water and a gallon of Gatorade on Sat­urday night, so I'm hydrated," DeVries said. "I've just got to keep hydrated all week. I think the worst is over, it probably won't ever be that bad again." SECONDARY TO NONE

The Iowa secondary was some­what of a question mark. coming into the 1997 season, but senior safety Kerry Cooks was pleased with how

KIM SILSERN1Kfn{£ DAILY IOWAN

----SACK ATTACK: Jared DeVries makes his way towards UNl quarterback Shane Fortney last week.

the unit did in its first game. Two new players, junior safety

Eric Thigpen and senior cornerback. Ed Gibson, were welcomed into the secondary against DNl.

"I think that UN! was a good test for our secondary," Cooks said. "I think. that Eddie Gibson and Eric Thigpen proved to the people that had speculirtion. that they could play.

"But UNI was just one test. I think that we'll really get to see how good our secondary can play against Tulsa and some of the receivers they have."

TULSA SBLDE. HUIlIlICAIE 110. IlaM

L Reggie Williams 2. Lydon "iloo 3. Harold Burgess 4. Todd Franz s: ,....., 6. IIri8II SlIt 7. .IernIId s.iIJI I. Donald .... 9. Sedrictt lJIIk

10: Terrance Joseph 10. . DereIt Nordstrom 11. Wes Caswell 12. Michael Wall 13. Marshall Gordon 15. RaIBt SII!t 3 16. JaB fiI2aIrIId 18. Kirtl fIIJric* 19. IbIIoaGuess 20. James AndII-. 2 L Kevin Isham 22. Spencer Braas 23. Zach Marino 24. Jody Sparl<.s 25. levi Gillen 26. CUIfia ..... '21. __ ...., 28. &a-....... Z9. .MiIIis N 30. ,....,..,.. SIDII 33. Philip Adobe 34. Frankie Johnson 35. Nate Pointer 37. Jeremy McClure 38. Wade Clark 39_ ~CIIIi 40. AIIw ... .n. BlllIIIiIIeIts 42.RidI'fIIII& n AIMIIw~ 44. l.eIIII Walkec 46. Ashon Farley 47. Jason Bennett 48. Allen Blackmon 49. lee V'lCk SO. CIIJ,..... 51 ......... '!a2.. "!.a 53 ........ SJ. c.-..... 55. Bryan Thomas 56. lach Gana 57. Nick Ragusa 58. Keith Carey 59. Zac Craie 61. Steve Weidower

I'ft. TB DB DB DB 1'1 1I UI ' -• DB PII WI! QII DB QI ell P IJ8

• I'll TB WB LB DE DB • • YB .. • YB

LB DB DB LB DB UI • I'M' 1I II LB LB WII LB DE

- ll _ C

OQ oa' Il( LB LB 01 LB LB C

lit. 5-10 5-11 5-11 6-1 ~ 5-11 5-11 i-4 5-11 6-2 6-0 5-8 6-4 5-11 6-3 6-3 6-1 5-10 5-0 6-1 5-7 6-2 6-4 5-10 5-9 5-10 ~ 5-11 i-5-18 6-1 5-11 '6-0 6-2 5-8 A 5-11 5!1l H 6-3 6..(l 6..(l 6-3 5-11 6-4 ~l 5-J H 6-3

" 6-1 6-3 6-5 6-1 6-2 6-3

'1ft. 1t. 244 .k. 188 Jr. 187 F~ 194 So. 103 Sa. 200 Sr. 1. Sa. 111) ft. 111 k 22' s.: 199 So. 183 Sr. 200 Fr. 195 Jr. ZfJ7 fr. 220 Jr. 199 Sr. 165 Ff. lIS !r. 237 Fr. 192 So. 225 Fr. 236 Sr. 186 Sr. 211 10. 1M Sr. 191 "-202 k J90 Fr. 1.95 Fe. 188 Fr. 175 Fr. 223 So. 187 Sr. 22S 71: lit k 155 ' fi Z3I . sr. 21-4 10. 224 Fr. 218 Fr. 213 Sr. 223 Jr. 235 Jr. m ;.- Tr. m k -"­• k 25J ........ !a 210 ~. 214 Fr. 344 Sr. 228 Fr. 230 Fr. 255 Fr.

63. __ .. 6!i. ... ScIiIIIr 66. J8.s-.r 67. CIIIis 0.-61. ....... 70. lC. Kelley 71. Bob Weeks 72. Tanp Webb " 13. loIIn lanl 74. Bob Bella 77. sa--~ 71. ·AIIIIIIr'" 79 ......... so. 111ft .... 12. JInttt ... 83. Tariq Green 84. Pete Muther 85. Robbie Geurin 85. Jeremy Golden 86. Damon Savage 87. ___ ..... ~ II. .,,....... 89: r.., .... . ...... tL .....,.. 92. JosII Martin 93. Ryan Farley 94. Joseph Talbot 95. DflIW McLauchlin 96. lim Martin '1. CIIIII. ... , .. ,..,..... ..........

.. • • 11£ • OT OG OG 01 OT (Jr-•• ., 11 • WI! TE OS WI! WI! • • -lIE

DE OT DE n: OT ~ III •

'-4 W

"" '"'

6-4 &-3 &-3 6-3 ~ W 1-1

""

.. ---. .. It. f't. ..

So. Jr. Fr: Fr. Jr. k t ..

-

I ,

• I

...: